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Characters / Digimon Ghost Game - Antagonists

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    In General 
  • Degraded Boss: Some of these are infamous boss Digimon from other Digimon anime series, such as Gigasmon or Piemon. It seems to be more common in later episodes.
  • Elite Mooks: The Ultimate-level Digimon have shades of being this. Not only does an author's blog imply that they are not merely Digimon a level higher but are actual Physical Gods, incidents involving them frequently result in dozens to hundreds of victims, and a good chunk of these had plans to Take Over the World or flat-out destroy it. Unlike Perfect Digimon, anything lower than their level doesn't even scratch them, and they can take a fair beating from their equals without dying.
  • Heel–Face Turn: A good chunk of them end up changing for the better as a result of losing to the kids and their partners, either becoming flat-out allies or at least ceasing their behavior.
  • Invisible to Normals: Humans without a Digivice can't see them unless they turn into their "hologram ghost" form or turn solid upon completely materializing. Several Digimon seek to render themselves solid by attacking or harming other people, and one even became solid on-screen by causing enough harm. On the other hand, the most dangerous Digimon tend to be solid from the get-go to emphasize the threat they pose.
  • The Many Deaths of You: There are many ways a Digimon can harm or even kill a person or other Digimon. The most common way is through Forced Transformation, but there are many other ways like kidnapping, altering their bodies, killing them over time, or even murdering them outright.
  • Monster of the Week: They are the weekly enemies the protagonists face due to them hearing the rumors surrounding them, passing by their location, or in some cases being sought out by them. Unlike previous series however, the Digimon of the week have proper characterization, outright replace most major, episodic conflicts in a fashion similar to GeGeGe no Kitarō, and contain more varied specimens, including boss-tier Digimon or even original Digimon.
  • Not Evil, Just Misunderstood: Zig zagged. Half of them play it straight, in that their actions come less from genuine malice and more from being Wrong Genre Savvy, or from making simple mistakes that make them come across as wicked. The other half on the other hand subvert this, either due to being genuinely malicious or simply not caring about the dangers they cause.
  • No Ontological Inertia: Zig Zagged. The damage caused by half of the Digimon encountered will dispel themselves after they are neutralized or taken down. The other half don't and often only the perpetrator can reverse it.
  • Our Ghosts Are Different: In-universe, the Digimon are coined 'Hologram Ghosts' by the public at large, due to their perceived connections to a series of supernatural phenomena and are more along the lines of digital youkai.
  • Talking the Monster to Death: Because Perfect level Digimon can be encountered while the heroes can only reach the Adult level, the heroes have to resort to trying to reach out to them and appeal to their nature. If that fails, the go-to solution is to have all of their partners gang up and try to force the enemy to retreat, and if it's made very clear that the Digimon is beyond saving, they'll kill them for real. Initially GulusGammamon emerges to kill them, but later on the party is willing to commit a kill or two or let other Digimon deal with them so they don't need to get their hands dirty. It happens less later on when the heroes have better resources to just beat most Digimon of the Week out of submission, though it doesn't always work.
  • Timed Mission: Certain Digimon don't kill their victims instantly, but instead kill them over time.
  • The Unsolved Mystery: A running theme behind many of the Digimon the kids face is the idea they're not in the Human World of their own volition, rather they were sent there, and inadvertently affected by the Digital Gate used to send them. No matter how many times the kids face them though, they're not any closer to finding out what the cause is. The most information they've been able to get is that the Digital Gates can sometimes affect a Digimon's behavior via Calamaramon, that it was someone who sent them to the Human World via Kuzuhamon, most likely a Digimon due to Kuzuhamon's Fantastic Racism towards humans, and that it was part of some sort of plan they have. Lilithmon reinforces the latter notion, while also stating the method used had no rhyme or reason to it in her eyes, compared to her own more straightforward Digital Gate.
  • Urban Legend: Several of them became this due to being unintentionally being seen by humans and then disappearing, or are notorious and/or enigmatic enough to make a bad name for themselves.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Either deliberately or not, many of them put Hiro, Ruli, and Kiyoshiro (and their partners, who are by default Child-Rank) in life-threatening situations. Alternatively, their victims are other children being targeted. Of the main trio, it's usually, though not always, Kiyoshiro who winds up the victim.
  • Would Hit a Girl: Just like children, the Digimon also tend to have no qualms making young women or girls their victims. A few like Vamdemon or the Chamblemon even specifically target women.

Independent Digimon

    Sirenmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sirenmon_9.jpg
"Listen to my song."

Voiced by: Nana Mizuki
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Polyphony, Aria, Canon

A singer Digimon hiding in a karaoke, appearing when a certain song is played. Her ghostly singing makes people terrified, prompting Hiro and his friends to investigate the building.


  • Actor Allusion: She's a singer like her voice actress, and her first words onscreen are "listen to my song", notable lyrics from the first opening of Symphogear, which Mizuki herself sang.
  • Attack of the Monster Appendage: She initially snares people by forming a giant arm out of the notes from her Canon attack and grabbing them with it.
  • Cute Monster Girl: Looks like a small humanoid covered with a robe who looks like a mixture of a fish and a bird and, wearing a golden mask covering most of her face.
  • Hand Blast: Her Canon attack summons a blast of musical notes from her hand.
  • Hollywood Tone-Deaf: Sirenmon loves singing but she's no good at it. After listening to Hiro's words, she decides to go off to train.
  • Logical Weakness: Her Canon attack allows the musical notes she summons to ricochet against any object they impact until they hit her targets. To overcome this, Angoramon (under Hiro's orders) takes BetelGammamon and flies higher than her to the sky, where, since there are no obstacles that could allow the notes to rebound from, Sirenmon's Canon loses its main advantage.
  • Make Some Noise: She's able to amplify her voice to painful levels. Her note projectiles also give off very loud sounds of their own and ricochet off of surfaces in the same way that actual sound waves do.
  • Not Evil, Just Misunderstood: She only wants people to hear her songs to inspire them as much as human songs did to her. Unfortunately, her bad singing combined with the ghostly appearance she takes while doing the song only makes people terrified of her. It doesn't help that she traps her unwilling audience with giant arms, either.
  • Pinball Projectile: Her musical notes bounce off of objects the way that actual sound would, albeit more slowly. They can also be deflected by other attacks.

    Yatagaramon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/yatagaramon_4.jpg

Voiced by: Yasunori Masutani (sounds)
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Vaccine
Attacks: Mikafutsu-no-kami, Haguro

A Digimon that seeks to free various birds throughout the city, temporarily teaming up with a fanatic human to do so.


  • Adaptational Villainy: Back in Digimon Data Squad, it was the Perfect-level form of Ikuto's partner, Falcomon. Here, it's the Monster of the Week.
  • Casting a Shadow: His Haguro attack involves him summoning a great dome of darkness that leave his opponents disoriented, allowing Yatagaramon to attack them while his enemies cannot do anything to him.
  • Cool Mask: Wears a pointed golden mask across his face.
  • Creepy Crows: A huge Digimon that resembles an intimidating crow that can manipulate darkness.
  • Elemental Rock-Paper-Scissors: Yatagaramon is a Vaccine-Attribute Digimon, making it susceptible to the Data-Attribute KausGammamon's attacks.
  • Feathered Fiend: He's a crow-like Digimon and one of the earlier enemies faced by the team.
  • One-Hit Kill: Its Mikafutsu-no-kami is an extremely dangerous move, capable of reducing any Digimon it touches into ones and zeroes, which is usually death. Thankfully no one is hit by this move after Angoramon warns the team about it.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: After its fight against KausGammamon, it just gives up on freeing the birds inside the bird sanctuary and instead goes to the Golden Land alongside the other birds who decide to go with him.
  • The Voiceless: Aside from several growls, this is the only antagonist encounter so far not to have a voice.
  • Wake-Up Call Boss: Unlike the other Digimon whom the tamers were either able to hold off or be reasoned with, Yatagaramon does not even utter a single word, which forces the partner Digimon to fight him directly. This ends with a heavy beatdown, which would have ended with the partner Digimon's deaths if it wasn't for Gammamon unlocking his evolution into KausGammamon.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: At the end, he's just freeing birds from their cages so they can be free and well. Unfortunately, his methods are very aggressive and put people in danger, without counting the emotional bonds between owners and pets he severs by freeing the birds. Not to mention his latest targets could have released dangerous predatory birds.

    Zassoumon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/original_zassoumon_and_clones.png

Voiced by: Tomomichi Nishimura (Zassoumon Chieftain), Mitsuki Nakamura (Giant Zassoumon)
Level: Adult
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Squeeze Vine

A plant Digimon that created clones of itself by spreading a virus via a Chain Letter.


  • Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever: By the time the group is down to just three Zassoumon, the resulting fusions are close to the size of the nearby buildings. Had all three combined at the end, they likely would have crossed into Kaiju status.
  • Fusion Dance: If they feel like they're outmatched, they can merge with the Zassoumon near them, forming bigger and bigger versions. To get how bad this is, the Zassoumon are initially big enough to pop out of a smartphone's screen, while the final three Zassoumon fusions at the end are near the size of buildings.
  • Green and Mean: Aggressive little buggers that have no problem with leeching off humans for energy. The elder Zassoumon averts this by calling off the fight and having a more yellowed palette.
  • Life Drinker: While the Zassoumon happily target water sources, they have no problem with chomping down on the limbs of people nearby once unleashed from the chain letter. They do this to slowly drain away their victim's vital fluids, leaving them weaker as they increase in size.
  • Make My Monster Grow: The more water they drink, the more a Zassoumon grows. This also happens when they get damaged, as they will merge, which makes them not only grow in size but also heal their wounds.
  • Palette Swap: The elder Zassoumon has a more autumnal color scheme to reflect his age.
  • The Swarm: Delete their Chain letter, and you have to deal with dozens to hundreds of those tiny little monsters.
  • Vine Tentacles: Have these in place of arms and use them to constrict enemies with their Squeeze Vine attack.

    Sealsdramon (Unmarked Spoilers) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sealsdramon.png
"...The number is all that matters..."

Voiced by: Nobutoshi Canna
Level: Adult
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Death Behind

A cyborg Digimon who serves as an assassin back in the Digital World, but soon turns into a serial killer in the real world.


  • Adaptational Badass: In Xros Wars, Sealsdramon is just a mass-produced Mook deployed by the Bagra Army. Here, he is a Serial Killer with a personal body count that is easily the highest confirmed of the entire franchise.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Sealsdramon has killed hundreds of other Digimon before meeting the heroes and it initially gives the heroes trouble by showering them with knives and not giving them an opening to retaliate. After it kills Bokomon and Gammamon evolves, it is effortlessly beaten in a matter of seconds by GulusGammamon.
  • Dark Is Evil: Is a Virus-type, wears dark colors, and is a remorseless Serial Killer.
  • Death by Irony: He launches knives through his victims' heads, so when GulusGammamon decides to avenge Bokomon's death, he returns the favor with his tail.
  • The Dreaded: He was labeled as Der Scharfrichter (German for "The Executioner") and passed as an Urban Legend by other Digimon. Bakumon also implies that he's infamous for pulling off his mass murders inside the Digital World. Apparently, his crimes are notorious even back there.
  • Gratuitous German: He counts his kills in German, but speaks Japanese otherwise.
  • Hero Killer: Attempts to assassinate Gammamon, but he ends up being pushed out of the way by Bokomon and taking the knife instead. This all happened after Jellymon survived hers since she was behind a window at the time.
  • Hidden Agenda Villain: It never truly reveals why it's doing all this. Bokomon dismisses it being given orders since it's in the human world, and when Gammamon evolves into GulusGammamon, Sealsdramon puts away his knife. When GulusGammamon tries to force it to confess, it just says "It's still just 1,000", "More bodies. It doesn't matter who. Just more." and "The number is all that matters." GulusGammamon concludes that it wasn't here on orders, and was just killing for the sake of a body count, but it doesn't confirm or deny it. When GulusGammamon kills it, it just says "Well done" before dying, as if its own death was okay since it added to "the number", which would go against what GulusGammamon suggests since it wouldn't be it's kill. Unless, of course, it's a killer recognizing the skills of another killer.
  • Knight of Cerebus: Not only is Sealsdramon the first character in the series to succeed in an unprecedented feat of murdering thousands of Digimon personally, he then kills one of the supporting cast and is rewarded by being the first Monster of the Week to die - in turn allowing the discovery that something is wrong with Gammamon. After him, the threat posed by enemy Digimon also exponentially skyrockets, and our protagonists find themselves dealing with more serial kidnappers, mass murderers, or other unpleasant Digimon.
  • Names To Run A Way From Very Fast: His title was German for "the Executioner". This alone should speak volumes.
  • Psycho Knife Nut: Sealsdramon is a widely feared Serial Killer. Knives are his weapon of choice, and he hurls them at a Digimon's head from a distance to slay them quickly and quietly.
  • The Quiet One: Seldom speaks out of counting the number of his victims in German and explaining to GulusGammamon about his motivation.
  • Robo Speak: His speech has a robotic voice changer over it.
  • Serial Killer: Sealsdramon kills Digimon left and right for seemingly no reason than because it wants to. It manages to rack up 1000 kills.
  • The Spartan Way: Unlike his Xros Wars Mook counterparts, this Sealsdramon is Truer to the Text of the Digimon Reference Book's lore, with the "Selection-D" screening test even being name-dropped. This also means he's brutally efficient.
  • Vader Breath: His creepy breathing is one of the few signs a victim has to pick up on before a knife comes their way.
  • Villain Respect: After being speared by GulusGammamon, he manages a "well done" before disintegrating.
  • Walking Spoiler: Everything pertaining to him correlates with one of the first significant moments in the plot, as well as killing Bokomon and causing Gammamon to evolve into GulusGammamon for the first time.
  • When All You Have Is a Hammer…: Sealsdramon doesn't need any fancy magic tricks to reach the highest personal body count in the franchise. All he needs is some knifes and deadly precision.
  • Would Hurt a Child: He will gleefully kill Child-level Digimon, and displays it by killing a pair of Child-level Monodramon before trying to kill Jellymon and Gammamon. He also seemingly doesn't care if Hiro and his friends were among his casualties despite them not being any of his targets.
  • The Worf Effect: It lies in the shadows and snips at unsuspecting Digimon with its knife and can take them down in one well-placed hit, succeeding in killing 1000 victims. It dies very quickly though once GulusGammamon shows up. This is Justified because he's an assassin built for sneaking in and killing targets by surprise, not direct, head-front combat.

    Jyureimon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jyureimon.png
"I'll eat you all!"

Voiced by: Shin Aomori
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Cherry Bomb, Illusion Mist, Vine Attack

A malevolent tree Digimon who absorbs victims to create new tree rings. Lately, he's been moving in on MoriShellmon's territory.


  • An Arm and a Leg: He's only driven off by everyone working together to break off two of his arms. It's noted this will put him out of commission for awhile if nothing else.
  • The Assimilator: He absorbs humans and Digimon alike to form his tree rings. Lately, he's only had human victims.
  • Attack Its Weak Point: He's driven off by multiple attacks concentrated on a weak point created by BetalGammamon's fire attacks. The fire weakens the wood enough that later attacks concentrated on that spot snap two of his arms off.
  • Evil Old Folks: Jyureimon's bushy mustache helps him look the part and he's been around for a long while due to his modus operandi of absorbing other beings to extend his life. He also speaks in a raspy voice like an old-timer, talking down to the much younger MoriShellmon.
  • Having a Blast: Can spray the area in front of him with exploding cherries when using his Cherry Bomb attack.
  • Karma Houdini: Though the humans he had absorbed prior to and during the episode are rescued, along with BetalGammamon blowing off two of his arms, Jyureimon survives his encounter with the team. Though MoriShellmon opts to keep an eye out for him, Jyureimon remains among one of the enemy Digimon to remain at large.
  • Logical Weakness: BetelGammamon is able to hurt him with fire attacks. Hiro calls BetelGammamon off before any serious damage is done, which proves to be a mistake as Jyureimon is then able to grab BetelGammamon. The fire attacks do create a weak point for the heroes to attack later and break off two of his arms.
  • Master of Illusion: The red mist he emits creates illusions of hostile trees.
  • Multi-Armed and Dangerous: Jyureimon has six arms and deals a fairly solid beating to MoriShellmon with them.
  • Serial Killer: Serial assimilator, but the end result is basically the same. Jyureimon has been preying on humans since he got into the human world but has a marked preference for Digimon.
  • Stronger with Age: Given that one of his tree rings takes as long as a century to form, he's been around a very long time, a fact that he taunts MoriShellmon with.
  • Treants: Jyureimon is a six-armed cherry tree that walks on its roots.
  • Villainous Glutton: He's solely driven by the need to absorb Digimon and humans into himself so that he can extend his own lifespan with their energy in his tree rings. To him, the heroes aren't opponents, but snacks for him to gorge on.
  • When Trees Attack: A wicked Digimon in the form of an old cherry tree that also entraps prey with the illusions of hostile trees.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Comes close to eating the main trio out of anger when they fight him.

    Frozomon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/frozomon.png
"Blast you!"

Voiced by: Rikiya Koyama
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Removal Blow, Defrost Blade, Glaciate Missile

A machine Digimon that attacks the new geothermal power plant Kiyoshiro helped build simply because it was in his way.


  • Blade Below the Shoulder: His left arm ends in a Hot Blade that he uses for one of his attacks.
  • Determinator: Absolutely NOTHING will get between him and those him will rescue. So much so that he won't take any detours.
  • Flipping Helpless: TeslaJellymon incapacitates Frozomon by hitting his upper section from beneath until he unbalances from the increasing tilt and flips over. The other Digimon he was guiding help him back up and stop the fight just in time to save the rest of the cast.
  • Hot Blade: His Defrost Blade is a blade he can heat to incandescence to clear away snow.
  • An Ice Person: He uses his missiles to freeze things and can pull in snow through his propeller to fire out of the snowblower on his tail.
  • Karma Houdini: He nearly kills the main characters for the crime of telling him to stop freezing the power plant before they all freeze to death. To his credit, he was just moving a pack of ice Digimon to a colder place and the power plant was in his way, but he was just too stubborn to go around it, so the party easily forgives him. He only gets moved back right to the side of the power plant after than being beaten by Ruli and TeslaJellymon rather than actually changing his ways though.
  • Lethally Stupid: His single-minded determination to clear away a heat-producing obstacle nearly got two-thirds of the main cast killed by hypothermia.
  • Macross Missile Massacre: Its Glaciate Missile is a barrage of six freezing missiles fired from its shoulders.
  • Never My Fault: Even after the situation is clarified, he claims that it's the humans' fault for building the power plant in the first place.
  • Shoulder Cannon: His Glaciate Missile is fired from cannons attached to its shoulders.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He tried to destroy the geothermal plant, nearly killing Hiro, Gammamon, Angoramon, and Kiyoshiro in the process so that a group of cold-adapted Digimon he's leading will get to someplace cold enough for them to live comfortably. He is a Virus attribute Digimon.

    Petermon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/petermon_2.jpg
"Children need to stay children."

Voiced by: Kenji Nojima
Level: Adult
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Snipe Sting, Twinkle Shoot, Midnight Fantasia

A fairy Digimon who kidnaps children and Child level Digimon at night and takes them to "Never-Ever Land".


  • Adult Hater: He hates Adults because they always "break their promises and lie". Ironically, he's an Adult-tier Digimon. As far as Digimon are concerned, however, he's a teen at best, both physically and psychologically.
  • Fisher King: When Petermon gets angry, the sky in his "Never-Ever Land" will turn from a bright pink to dark grey.
  • Growing Up Sucks: His M.O. for kidnapping children and child-level Digimon from the real world, as he sees growing up to be evil.
  • Heel–Face Turn: After witnessing the children and Digimon he kidnapped expressing a desire to grow up, he nearly breaks down in sorrow. Hiro however tells him that "growing up" doesn't mean you can't still have fun and act like a kid, combined with the arrival of CaptainHookmon and offer for Petermon to join his crew, convinces Petermon to free everyone and turn good.
  • Irony: Like others of his species, despite his love for children and not wanting them to grow up, he himself is an Adult level Digimon. In Digimon context, the "Adult" level is equal to a human teenager, but he's still no kid.
  • The Kindnapper: He delusionally believes that he's this by giving children a place to safely play without having to worry about troublesome adults. Too bad he has no qualms about killing them if they so much as talk about growing up.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: Inflicts this on the families of the children he takes, making them forget they ever had the child. Attempting to remember what he's erased can cause the victims to suffer painful shocks akin to Mind Rape. He also does this to the main trio after he comes and visits them while sleeping once he judges them and their age as being no better than an actual adult.
  • Mass Hypnosis: His "Midnight Fantasia" can hypnotize all of the (human and Digimon) children he kept to sleepwalk and incapacitate their foes.
  • The Nose Knows: He has a very good sense of smell, able to tell if a child "reeks" of adults or not.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Befitting his origin of Peter Pan, Petermon has a very childish mindset, lashing out at anyone he assumes is lying to him, and hating grown-ups because they always "break their promises" and "always lie". His lashing out can cause him to attack the people he kidnaps if he thinks they're lying to him, and he was originally intending on killing the main cast in their sleep before settling on wiping their memories, then deciding otherwise the instant they enter his realm. It takes Hiro explaining to him that growing up doesn't mean you have to stop playing and having fun for him to consider changing, and meeting CaptainHookmon solidifies it, letting him drop the psychopathic part.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He genuinely thinks kids and Child level Digimon would be happier not having to grow up, and takes them to Never-Ever Land so that they can remain kids and play forever. When the various Digimon he kidnapped start Evolving and the kids started expressing a desire to grow up, he's left on the verge of tears begging them to stop.
  • Would Hurt a Child: During a friendly game of soccer, Petermon threatened to kill a Child-level Elecmon when they simply wondered about being taller, showing his true nature that he was willing to kill Child-level Digimon if they have the slightest mention about evolving into Adult levels. In addition, despite Hiro and his friends being preteens, Petermon sees them as no different than actual grownups and treats them as such just because they tried to stop him; first by wiping their memories when he visits them in their sleep, then by actively trying to slay them and their partners when they enter "Never-Ever Land" to save the kidnapped children. He almost does this to another child during their fight (although accidentally when trying to hit SymbareAngoramon this time), who is saved in the nick of time by two Orcamon, evolved from the Hawkmon who recruited the main trio, deflecting his sword.

    SkullGreymon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/skullgreymon_8.png
"Rot and decay."

Voiced by: Hisao Egawa
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Oblivion Bird

An undead Digimon that chased Pillomon in the past. Because of that, Pillomon still has nightmares, which leads to trouble when they're recruited by Jellymon.


  • Invincible Villain: Possibly because it's part of a nightmare, it shrugs off just about any attack thrown its way and never slows down. Even when SymbareAngoramon and TeslaJellymon power up by manipulating the dream and proceed to easily smash it to bits, the pieces of SkullGreymon just start reattaching themselves together again. Waking up Pillomon is the only way to stop it.
  • One-Word Vocabulary: "Rot and decay".
  • Pulling Themselves Together: Just when it looks like the partner Digimon have it down for the count, SkullGreymon's bones begin to reassemble themselves for another round.
  • Super-Persistent Predator: It relentlessly chased Kiyo, Jellymon, Ruli, and Angoromon. Justified since it was the start of the nightmare.
  • The Unfought: Technically, since the SkullGreymon fought in the episode was part of Pillomon's nightmare, not the real SkullGreymon.

    Ajatarmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ajatarmon_0.jpg
"It will go well."

Voiced by: Takako Honda
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Vaccine
Attacks: Assault Hatchet, Tied-Up Ivy, Shotgun Moss

A plant Digimon that developed a crush on a botanist called Yuuto, even going as far as turning anyone whom he talked to into copies of her species.


  • And I Must Scream: Ajatarmon's poison slowly turns its victims into her species, with the limbs of the victims slowly turning into vines first.
  • Ax-Crazy: It doesn't matter if you've spoken to Yuuto for an hour or 15 minutes — you WILL end up on her hit list. And on the more literal side of things, she uses a hatchet as a weapon.
  • Because You Were Nice to Me: After so long of being trapped on Earth with nobody to communicate with and even before she possessed GW-1, Ajatarmon interpreted Yuto's words of affection to his plants as being for her or as close as she could get to having someone talk to her, sparking her admiration for him.
  • Body Horror: Once someone is made to sample her poison, their limbs begin to painfully transform into tangles of thorny vines. Ajatarmon ends up doing this to herself once she realizes Yuuto won't become a Digimon like her, using her poison under the delusion that it will make her human. It partly works, but the end result is a deformed and rotting plant clone of Yuuto that ends up crumbling away into digital dust.
  • Cruel and Unusual Death: And a self-inflicted one to boot. When Yuuto proclaims that he can't become an Ajatarmon like her, Ajatarmon decides that she wants to become a human like him and injects herself with her own poison, spending her final moments wracked with despair over how confused she is and writhing in pain as parts of her body fall apart or are pulled off before succumbing to her death.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Despite Yuuto's parents being the people who spend the most time around him, Ajatarmon refuses to experiment on them since they are his caregivers. More importantly - she genuinely loved him.
  • Go Mad from the Isolation: She first arrived in the human world many years ago, invisible and intangible to humans. The closest thing she had to company was Yuuto speaking uplifting words of encouragement to his plants, which she began to interpret as meant for her.
  • Lady Looks Like a Dude: With her masculine build and lack of any feminine Tertiary Sexual Characteristics, it's rather easy for viewers to mistake her for male. But once Ajatarmon begins to speak in full sentences, it's clear that she has a voice actress.
  • Ludicrous Precision: Before she attacks someone, she mutters the exact amount of time Yuuto hung out with them. It's the only sign her victims had to pick up, and even then it's usually too late.
  • Mad Love: Mad enough that she plans to turn Yuuto into an Ajatarmon like her with the test subjects being humans who spent time with him.
  • Madness Mantra: "It will go well." The phrase Yuuto would use to encourage budding plants became twisted into her belief that as long as she didn't give up, her experiments would bear fruit.
  • Scissors Cuts Rock: Was able of evading, then deflect BetelGammamon's fireballs at him without even taking a scrape, despite being a plant-warrior Digimon.
  • Spikes of Villainy: Covered in these, from the thorns on her vines to the ones on her armor.
  • Stalker with a Crush: Has a crush on Yuuto, and is willing to turn other people he came close to into Ajatarmon — including anyone who did something as simple as talk to him.
  • Tragic Villain: At her core, Ajatarmon is just another terrified and lonely Digital World refugee who was desperate for companionship and wanted to repay the only person who had any level of communication with her. Her love of Yuuto was completely authentic, and having him admonish her for taking his reassurance the wrong way and assaulting so many people broke her. By the time she dies, Ajatarmon has developed severe body dysmorphia, is in tears over what she's done to Yuuto, has her philosophies tarnished, and is literally falling apart, finally dissipating just before her only friend can give her a much-needed hug.
  • Vine Tentacles: She uses several of these to strike and restrain her opponents as part of her Tied-up Ivy attack. Her victims are coiled up in them before she administers her poison needle.
  • Vocal Dissonance: It looks like a plant-tribal warrior-man thing, but it speaks in the voice of a young woman. This actually makes sense because Ajatarmon's namesake is Ajatar, an evil female spirit in Finnish folklore.
  • Yandere: Not only does she stalk Yuuto through electronics constantly, but she also puts anyone who so much as talks to him in front of her through an agonizing mutation, and isn't shy about trying to kill anyone who tries to stop her. However, as noted above, she never targeted his parents before because she is grateful for them taking care of him.
  • Would Hurt a Child: Uses Kiyoshiro as a "test subject" for her poison, turning his legs and one of his arms into vines in the process.

    Digitamamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/digitamamon_6.png
Click here to see his face 

Voiced by: Rie Kugimiya
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Enigma, Nightmare Syndrome

Angoramon's best friend and fellow explorer back in the Digital World. One day he became stranded in the human world as well but found the food there inedible to him...


  • Adaptational Villainy: In Adventure and Adventure 02, Digitamamon is just a restaurant owner who went into trouble with the chosen children because he won't take Yen as payment. Here, he is a man-eating monstrosity who most likely can't survive without eating humans.
  • Affably Evil: Unfailingly polite and dissonant and never attacks unless he's actually hungry. He also never suffers from any sort of Villainous Breakdown even as SymbareAngoramon cuts him down.
  • Affectionate Nickname: Angoramon gave him the humorously illustrious title "The Explorer of Knowledge" back in the Digital World.
  • Ambiguous Situation: He says that he only gained his Horror Hunger upon materializing, but he doesn't know what caused him to materialize, just that it suddenly happened one day. Considering the things other Digimon like Dracumon have done to try and materialize, it's concerning that Digitamamon suddenly did so one day with no idea how.
  • Commonality Connection: Back in the Digital World, he bonded with Angoramon over their shared love of reading and learning new things.
  • Cute and Psycho: He's a dangerous, man-eating Digimon...but his voice is very kidlike and he acts like a curious kid if he's not trying to eat anyone. He also uses "boku" to refer to himself.
  • Dissonant Serenity: He tells Angoramon that they could go back to talking about Digimon history even after he tried to attack Ruli and the boys.
  • Evil Former Friend: In the Digital World, Angoramon and Digitamamon were close friends, spending their time doing research and studying other Digimon. Upon meeting up again in the human world, while they're initially happy to see each other, Angoramon is horrified when his old friend tries to eat Ruli, and admits to having eaten humans before. Left with no choice, he deletes Digitamamon, his old friend's dying words being that Angoramon has ultimately changed, and he can't tell if Angoramon is Digimon or human now.
  • Fighting Your Friend: Angoramon is forced to fight him to protect Ruli, with Gammamon and Jellymon joining him once they arrive. Angoramon didn't want to fight his old friend though, even getting in the way when Canoweissmon wanted to deliver the finishing blow. Once it became clear however that Digitamamon refused to stop though, SymbareAngoramon delivered the final blow himself.
  • He Knows Too Much: When he first materialized, he was both starving and afraid of being found by humans. He solved both problems by eating any humans that found him. Also a possible interpretation of him eating Ruli over Hiro's Compromising Call.
  • Horror Hunger: Upon materializing, he gained an insatiable hunger that overrode his initial fear of humans, driving him to accidentally eat the humans in the house he was hiding in. While he initially tried spitting them back up, draining their spirits was the only thing that satiated his hunger, making him addicted to doing so. By the time he faces the heroes, he's practically begging Angoramon to let him eat the kids to satiate his hunger.
  • Implacable Man: The entire group attacking him in their Adult stages doesn't even slow his walk or interrupt his speech as he casually tells Angoramon about how he wants to chat some more about the good old days after he's done eating.
  • Kill the Ones You Love: Angoramon is forced to kill him to prevent him from eating Ruli, Hiro, and Kiyoshiro.
  • Life Drinker: He feeds on a human's spirit when he eats them, which is what makes them so delectable to him. It also reduces the bodies to sand, which he spits out.
  • No-Sell: His shell is very hard like others of his species, and he's able to shrug off the attacks of everyone. It takes Canoweissmon using his claws that can normally easily pierce Chrome Digizoid (if it's low in purity) just to make a crack in his shell, a crack that SymbareAngoramon uses to finish him off.
  • Obliviously Evil: Despite graduating to feeding on humans not just for survival, but because he enjoys it, Digitamamon is unable to see that he's doing anything wrong, and doesn't understand why his old friend Angoramon wants him to stop.
  • Reduced to Dust: The bodies of his victims are reduced to sand thanks to him draining their spirits when he eats them.
  • Serial Killer: While the first family was ultimately an accident, Digitamamon has eaten several tenants afterward to satiate his hunger, as evident by the countless piles of sand in the house.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: Despite only appearing in one episode, Digitamamon is notable in that they were the first Digimon to force Angoramon, not Gammamon to intentionally kill him, as he was unable to be reasoned with and was fully intent on eating more humans if not stopped.
  • To Serve Man: For a time he just observed humans invisibly, but once he materialized and the starvation set in, it was too much to bear and he resorted to eating humans upon finding himself addicted to consuming their spirit.
  • Urban Legend: Digitamamon's man-eating behavior was so notorious, that people start spreading tales about his residence and called it the "Man-Eating Mansion" where people supposedly rented it and were never seen again. Hiro and Ruli initially brushed it off until Digitamamon tried to eat Ruli and Hiro saw him and Angoramon breaking out from a window fighting.
  • Vocal Dissonance: He's voiced by Rie Kugimiya, a voice actress known for voicing Tsunderes, but since she's voicing a man-eating Serial Killer here it comes across as dissonantly creepy than anything.
  • What Measure Is a Non-Human?: His rationale behind eating humans comes down to that he was left with no other option but to starve, and they aren't Digimon like him anyway. When SymbareAngoramon delivers the final blow, Digitamamon asks him if he's even a Digimon anymore, or if he's a human now, since that's how little he recognizes his former friend anymore.

    Splashmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/splashmon.png

Voiced by: Hiroaki Miura
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Poisonous Force, Hydro-Pressure, Bead-Drown, Tiger Typhoon

A vain water Digimon who converts people to water in order to turn their fear into a beauty serum. He stalks them with the sound of dripping water before appearing before them from the nearest water source after making the sound for the third time.


  • Advancing Boss of Doom: He chases the group through a cruiser where the group can't harm him with any Digimon because he's too fast and elusive to hit, and if he manages to land a hit on something, they're immediately put out of action. Once they reach its upper deck, however, Hiro devises a plan that will incapacitate him for good.
  • Ascended Extra: An incredibly unique and downplayed example that also happens to be Demoted to Extra. In Xros Wars, he is one of the Death Generals under the service of Bagramon and a virtual One-Man Army (since his "associates" are a part of himself). In Digimon Adventure: 2020, he's reduced to a minor minion of Devimon and only in his Darkness Mode form. Here he's an ordinary Monster of the Week, which is at least still better than a minor minion taken down in a short span of time.
  • Blob Monster: He's a living mass of water, though he seemingly can't add existing water to his body.
  • Bond Villain Stupidity: When Hiro and co. confront him, he manages to put both BetalGammamon and TeslaJellymon out of commission, but still treats the trio as more victims than opponents. This comes back to bite him when Hiro figured out that Ruli and Angoramon can put him out of action by freezing him instead.
  • The Chessmaster: Splashmon hinges on not being spotted by the party so he can make them paranoid about every tap of water they hear. When they actually confront him in a cruiser he even declares:
    Splashmon (after attacking Ruli): "This is close to the quality I am after. (looking at Hiro) You're the only low-quality one".
  • Discard and Draw: He's seemingly incapable of creating Drippins, unlike his Xros Wars counterpart. On the other hand, one touch from him can easily turn people and Digimon into water droplets.
  • Elemental Shapeshifter: He's a living mass of water that can take on a human-like appearance.
  • Emotion Eater: Sustains his appearance through others’ fear.
  • "Get Back Here!" Boss: Splashmon doesn't confine himself to one place and instead wanders all over the place. The only clue to finding him is through a strand of his hair that Hiro kept in a jar.
  • Logical Weakness: In instructing Ruli to change to frozen AR-field, Hiro correctly guesses that Splashmon cannot control water when it's frozen. SymbareAngoramon easily defeats Splashmon by freezing him with a cold-temperature wind attack.
  • Manipulative Bastard: Sets Hiro and co. on a chase that leaves the party hearing water drips for the rest of the day. Their Digimon doesn't hear any water sounds, but the humans were left freaked out and making them easier to prey on by Splashmon.
  • Making a Splash: He can control any water near him, up to and including entire aquariums. He can also turn people into orbs of water.
  • One-Hit Kill: He doesn't even deal damage against the hero's Digimon. Instead, he just pokes his finger within them to put them out of action, which can't be reversed unless he is incapacitated or defeated.
  • Organ Autonomy: The bit of his hair that Gammamon servers keeps trying to rejoin his body. When trapped in a water bottle, it presses against the side in whichever direction is toward Splashmon, which the main trio uses to track him. However, this fails since he is still able to sense what happens to the piece, which allows him to escape and continue spreading terror to the trio.
  • Urban Legend: His serial abductions were passed around the Internet as a ghost story.
  • Zipperiffic: Per his species, he's a suit of water in human form. However, he doesn't seem to hide his Darkness Mode from within.

    Toropiamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/toropiamon_4.png

Voiced by: Shinichi Yamada
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Tropical Venom, Petally Carnage

A dinosaur-like plant Digimon responsible for unleashing a wave of toxic pollen over a mall Kiyoshiro and Jellymon were shopping at.


  • Breath Weapon: His Tropical Venom attack has him unleash a burst of pollen in this form.
  • Dinosaurs Are Dragons: While a plant-like Digimon, Toropiamon has the appearance of a huge saurian dinosaur. However, the massive leaf wings extending from his back and Breath Weapon ability also make him more dragon-like.
  • Green and Mean: He's a plant-based Digimon who's responsible for the toxic fog and indirectly tied to the outbreak of deadly Kodokugumon. It winds up being subverted on the mean part, as Toropiamon had no idea that his pollen was hurting people or that the Kodokugumon he saw as mere pests were using his stolen venom for their own benefit.
  • Having a Blast: His Petally Carnage attack involves him shaking off a cloud of explosive pollen from the petals around his neck.
  • Obliviously Evil: He doesn't even mean to be causing trouble. All he wants to do is go home with his fellow Toropiamon, but his pollen is harming the surrounding population, and to make matters worse, a swarm of Kodokugumon takes advantage of him being grounded to feed off of him. No wonder he's ticked off.
  • Poisonous Person: His pollen is toxic to humans, with anyone who inhales it breathing green fire before passing out. Had Thetismon not spread an antidote across the entire building, it's likely everyone who inhaled it or got bit by one of the Kodokugumon would have died.
  • Poor Communication Kills: Does this in spades. Had Toropiamon just explained that he was using the pollen to only contact his friends, there wouldn't have likely been a fight at all. Instead, he blindly attacks Kiyoshiro and TeslaJellymon, thinking they took away his pollen with the Digivice's field. Granted, they don't tell him right away that the Kodokugumon were stealing his venom and using it to hunt humans, along with his pollen being toxic for them, but that still doesn't excuse him for using lethal force against them. He even tried to attack Angoramon with his tails when the latter was merely flying over the pollen cloud to see what was making it. However, his bad attitude could be explained by the Kodokugumon swarm irritating him with their bites, since he chills out completely after they flee.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: Toropiamon was releasing pollen to try and signal his location to its friends, six other Toropiamon, after getting lost. Problem was, not only was he unaware that his pollen was toxic to humans, but the Kodokugumon that had been bugging him were draining his pollen directly and using it to poison everyone in the mall. Once everyone explained to him how they dispersed his fog by accident and his friends found him, he gladly left peacefully, while acknowledging Kiyoshiro's reminder to not spread his pollen in heavily populated areas.
  • Vine Tentacles: He can use his dual tails to act as these. He nearly swats Angoramon out of the sky, under the assumption that he was a threat.

    Kodokugumon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kodokugumon.png
Spiders?! AGAIN!?

Level: Child
Attribute: Virus

A swarm of spider Digimon harassing Toropiamon, draining him of his pollen and attacking humans at the mall to make themselves grow.


  • Big Creepy-Crawlies: Double Subverted. At first, they're rather small, befitting the "Ko" prefix in their name meaning "small". As they bite more people and drain them, however, they increase in size, becoming nearly as big as regular Dokugumon.
  • Giant Spider: While they're bigger than most real spiders, their initial size is tiny... and then they start feeding off of human data and bulk up, with some big enough to fill an escalator.
  • Hidden Agenda Villain: It's unclear why they were harassing Toropiamon for his pollen and attacking people outside of the vague idea of getting bigger. What's more, once Toropiamon is defeated, Herissmon notes in confusion how quickly they ran off, leaving it unclear what they were doing.
  • Make My Monster Grow: Initially palm-sized, the Kodokugumon grow the more they leech off of the data of their victims. Some are the size of cats or dogs, while the biggest ones seen are the size of couches.
  • Mistaken Identity: Kiyoshiro initially mistakes them for the Dokugumon that served Archnemon, only for Jellymon to correct him.
  • Poison Is Corrosive: The venom they absorbed from Toropiamon not only makes humans ill, but enough of it can eat through solid steel, as demonstrated by the one that tried to attack Kiyoshiro, Jellymon, and Yuna in an elevator. They thankfully only apply enough to simply weaken humans to feed off of them instead of melting them straight away.
  • Poisonous Person: Zig-Zagged Trope. Jellymon notes that Kodokugumon don't naturally possess venomous qualities, but as Kiyoshiro figures out, they can drain venom from others to use for their bites, in this case via biting Toropiamon.
  • The Swarm: There are possibly hundreds of the little things, and a good chunk of them were harassing Toropiamon to try and drain his pollen for themselves. Toropiamon himself considers them more an annoyance than anything and quickly blasts some on his neck.
  • The Voiceless: None of them say a word.

    Ex-Tyrannomon & WaruMonzaemon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ex_tyrannomon.png
Ex-Tyrannomon
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/warumonzaemon_3.png
WaruMonzaemon

Voiced by: Tetsu Shiratori (Ex-Tyrannomon), Takashi Matsuyama (WaruMonzaemon)
Level: Perfect (both)
Attribute: Vaccine (Ex-Tyrannomon), Virus (WaruMonzaemon)
Attacks: Black Matter, Pretty Attack (Ex-Tyrannomon), Heart Break Attack (WaruMonzaemon)

A pair of evil plush toy Digimon who suddenly emerged out of Kayono's closet, manipulating her to allow them to unleash mass destruction.


  • Adaptational Late Appearance: Ex-Tyrannomon had never appeared in an anime series since its introduction in 1998, with its first anime appearance being in Ghost Game, 24 years later.
  • Anti-Debuff: Ex-Tyrannomon's Pretty Attack closely resembles this as it reverses the doll transformations.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: Compared to its partner WaruMonzaemon, Ex-Tyrannomon doesn't look anywhere near as outwardly evil, resembling a pink plush version of the fierce Tyrannomon and his voice is high-pitched and cheesy as opposed to WaruMonzaemon's threatening, low-pitched tone. However, it's the one who turns people into dolls with its Black Matter attack and has no problem with manipulating a young girl for its amusement.
  • Brainwashing for the Greater Good: They’re eventually defeated when Monzaemon hits them with his attack to turn them into good-natured Digimon, eventually turning every person whom Ex-Tyrannomon turned into dolls back into humans.
  • The Bully: A particularly monstrous example. Being strong Digimon, they use Kayono to subjugate and intimidate humans, either by turning them into dolls or threatening them if they don’t listen to their demands.
  • Casting a Shadow: WaruMonzaemon's Heart Break Attack has him fire heart shapes made of darkness.
  • The Corrupter: Their appearance is what turns the already unstable Kayono into a menace for the entire city, though it doesn’t take much for Kayono to embrace her newfound dominance over others.
  • Creepy Doll: The two are plush toy Digimon who teamed up with Kayono to turn people she doesn't like into dolls. Then it devolved into a spree rampage where they go around and attack random passersby on the streets.
  • Dark Is Evil: WaruMonzaemon, being a corrupted version of a Monzaemon, has a mostly black body, while Ex-Tyrannomon is a Digimon hidden inside a Tyrannomon's toy plush (which has a dark form peeking out from inside the plush’s mouth) and whose attacks involve spheres of darkness turning people into dolls. Both are unpleasant, sadistic Digimon who enjoy fulfilling Kayono's most depraved desires.
  • False Friend: They eventually reveal to Hiro and Ruli that they don’t really care about Kayono, they just hang out with her because she allows them to cause all the mayhem and destruction they desire. Monzaemon and Kayono hear this when they breach into the Digital Field.
  • Faux Affably Evil: They might act all polite and friendly in front of Kayono and even use a signature verbal tic in front of her, but they drop the act very quickly as soon as Hiro and Ruli run into them and they don't hide that they are sadistic, dangerous Digimon.
  • Forced Transformation: Ex-Tyrannomon's Black Matter is an orb of dark energy that turns anyone hit by the attack into a creepy-looking doll. Also, if the dolls are altered or torn in any way and the transformation is undone, it will be carried over to the real person.
  • The Heavy: Ex-Tyrannomon does most of the duo's dirty work, turning people into dolls with its attacks.
  • Kick the Dog: Both of them happily convince Kayano to let them turn the people that actually have her best interests in mind (her parents, teacher, a social worker, and Aoi) into dolls.
  • Light Is Not Good: Ex-Tyrannomon is one of the few Vaccine-type Digimon troublemakers, but it's just as vicious as WaruMonzaemon, probably worse because he does most of the duo's dirty work.
  • One-Hit Kill: Ex-Tyrannomon's Black Matter doesn't damage anything but instead turns anything into a doll, be it a human, Digimon, or even inanimate objects like a tree. Once Jellymon and SymbareAngoramon are hit by this move, they can't do anything until Ex-Tyrannomon reverses the effect.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Both of them are Perfect level Digimon twice as tall as the average person, but have a childlike desire to cause suffering and terrorize others.
  • Verbal Tic: "Nee, nee~" for Ex-Tyrannomon, and "Naa, naa~" for WaruMonzaemon. However, they seemingly only do this if they're trying to act kind in front of Kayono.

    Musyamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/musyamon.png
"Cut. Slice."

Voiced by: Masashi Ebara
Level: Adult
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Kirsute Gomen

A demon man Digimon who, upon arriving from the real world, somehow merged with his katana, Shiratorimaru. Since then he's been possessing other Digimon to attack humans.


  • Adaptational Superpower Change: This Musyamon demonstrates several abilities unheard of by any other member of his species; infusing himself with his sword and instantly killing any Digimon who are separated from him in sword form. Justified in that crossing over from the Digital World somehow resulted in Musyamon fusing with his blade.
  • Battle in the Center of the Mind: Unlike previous Digimon who held his sword, he's unable to directly assume control of Angoramon at first and instead assails him with constant commands to cut, and attempts to get him to relinquish the sword to Reppamon in hopes of a more pliable wielder. He finally manages to wear down Angoramon's mental defenses after two days in his possession.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: He may use the lifeforce of humans and Digimon to revive himself and is shown to take some sadistic pleasure in trying to take Angoramon's body, but a Sore Loser he is not.
  • Evil Weapon: Anyone holding his sword is unable to let go of it, and is compelled to attack others to absorb power to rematerialize Musyamon's body.
  • Face Death with Dignity: He was prepared to be killed by SymbareAngoramon and Zubamon, but Zubamon tells him he doesn't want to take his life as he has already fulfilled his revenge by beating him in a duel, sparing Musyamon.
  • Graceful Loser: He takes his defeat at the hands of SymbareAngoramon and Zubamon well, admitting his loss and asking to be killed as a punishment.
  • Karma Houdini: While beaten and having his sword shattered, he isn't defeated, merely lead back to the Digital World by BlackTailmon Uver. with no sign of him being punished.
  • Life Drinker: Like the blades of other Musyamon, his sword can do this to any Digimon that isn't slain by it and it drains enough to force KausGammamon to revert. It also passively drains TeslaJellymon at a slower rate just from her tentacles being near it.
  • Living Battery: Angoramon managing to land a cut on Kausgammamon provides enough power to fully restore Musyamon's body in one go. Once he realizes the immense amount of power sleeping within Gammamon his first intention is to sap the rest of it.
  • Noble Demon: Though he uses humans and Digimon to defuse himself from his katana with little remorse, Musyamon, as a samurai-like Digimon, is shown to have principles and honor, admitting his defeat once SymbareAngoramon and Zubamon break his Shiratorimaru and leaving the human world with BlackTailmon Uver. peacefully once Zubamon spared him.
  • Noodle Incident: In the past he fought Zubamon and scarred him, prompting him to seek revenge on Musyamon for his defeat, but nothing is elaborated beyond that.
  • Your Soul Is Mine!: Two fold. Whenever his katana cuts a human, they're absorbed into it. And if a Digimon manages to get another Digimon to hold the blade, they'll be absorbed as well. The latter has no way of coming back due to their data being used to reform Musyamon's body.

    Sepikmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sepikmon_7.png
"Let's cross the river."

Voiced by: Ayaka Saitou
Level: Armor
Attribute: Free
Attacks: Spirit Boomerang

A demon man Digimon that can speak to the spirits of the dead. After Kiyoshiro has a near-death experience in a digital field, Sepikmon begins following him and attempts to kill him so they can become friends.


  • Battle Boomerang: His Spirit Boomerang attack, using a cursed boomerang occupied by the spirits of the dead.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: Sepikmon only seeks to befriend Kiyoshiro and isn't a cruel manipulator like some Digimon. Unfortunately, he's accustomed to only playing with the souls of the dead, meaning that if he and Kiyoshiro are to become best friends, then he has to die. He has no clue as to why this completely terrifies him.
  • Hero Killer: A rare example out of non-malicious intent. He technically killed Kiyoshiro and sent him to Limbo who is one portal away from actually cementing it by dragging him across the Sanzu river.
  • Hitodama Light: While at the Sanzu, he's surrounded by several of these.
  • I Just Want to Have Friends: He befriends the spirits of the dead and can't imagine being friends with the living. When he runs into Kiyoshiro, he tries to befriend him by getting rid of that pesky body of his. Based on this, Hiro has the idea for Sepikmon to live at Mount Osore, a place strongly associated with the underworld, and befriend the spirits there.
  • I See Dead People: Sepikmon can speak to the spirits of the dead.
  • Mythology Gag: Like his Digimon Frontier counterpart, Sepikmon tries to make friends by killing other beings he wants to befriend. Aside from that, it's not a Digimon being targeted this time, but a human.
  • Poltergeist: He has the ability to move objects in a way to purposefully kill people, signified by the hologram ghost marks around the object before they set off.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: After Kiyoshiro rejects his offer of friendship and runs off, the eyes on his mask glow red, leading to him actively hunting Kiyoshiro down.
  • The Underworld: Instead of winding up in the human world as most Digimon do, he found himself in a human afterlife. Namely, on the banks of the Sanzu River.
  • Wrecked Weapon: At the peak of their fight, TeslaJellymon shatters his boomerang with a kick.

    Manticoremon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/manticoremon_2.jpg

Voiced by: Masaya Takatsuka
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attack: Trinity Gospel, Acid Injection

A demon beast Digimon that normally serves under angel Digimon such as Darcmon, but he was separated from her and, after devouring the data of a werewolf legend, started attacking a village.


  • Beware My Stinger Tail: He has three tails, ending with stingers, which he uses to impale enemies and inject them with acid.
  • Breath Weapon: His Trinity Gospel technique involves him firing a large beam of swirling venom from his mouth.
  • Cool Mask: Much of his face is dominated by a metallic mask with a pattern of three eyes running down it.
  • Curbstomp Battle: Combined with his venomous tails, speed, and size, Manticoremon utterly demolishes BetelGammon, Thetismon, and SymbareAngoramon without breaking a sweat. Not long after, he winds up on the receiving end of this by Lamortmon.
  • Human Sacrifice: An elder attempted to sacrifice Ruli to appease him, believing that he was the legendary werewolf. Predictably, Ruli pretended to go along and confirmed for herself that he was a Digimon and not a werewolf.
  • Light Is Not Good: It's an angelic Digimon who believes that he was the werewolf of an ancient legend, and thus went around and attacked people.
  • Lightning Bruiser: Despite his size, Manticoremon is fast, able to toss around the children's Digimon with ease, and evade Thetismon teleporting in to attack him. It's likely the reason why people mistook him for the werewolf of legend.
  • Not Himself: On his own, Manticoremon is a Non-Malicious Monster that got separated from Darcmon, more akin to a pet than anything else. After accidentally consuming the data of a local legend involving a legendary werewolf though, Manticoremon mistakenly believed he was the werewolf, and began attacking the villagers to adhere to the legend. He continues to do so until Lamortmon defeats him and Darcmon returns, purging him of the data and taking him back with her, promising the kids she'll keep a better eye on him.
  • Poisonous Person: Manticoremon can inflict poisonous wounds on their victims, transferring it through their claws or tail stingers. One of his attacks even has him launching venom from his mouth like a blast of energy.
  • Technicolor Toxin: His attacks are accompanied by the color purple when he uses his venom. While the wounds he leaves his human victims with are stated to blacken in color, they appear as various shades of purple to the viewer.
  • The Voiceless: Like Sangloupmon before him, he only howls and roars, not even announcing his attacks like other Digimon. He also utters a pained whine after Lamortmon spares him.

    Gigasmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gigasmon_3.png

Voiced by: Ken Uo
Level: Hybrid
Attribute: Variable
Attack: Earthquake, Hurricane Bomber

A mineral Digimon who abducts people underground, turning them into statues to create monuments in advance of humanity's eventual demise.


  • Adaptational Nice Guy: In Frontier, Gigasmon is one of the members of the resident Quirky Miniboss Squad and one of its deadlier and more competent ones too. In Ghost Game, he's just a misguided Digimon who had no idea he watched a trailer for a disaster movie.
  • Adaptational Superpower Change: Unlike in Frontier, this Gigasmon can turn people into stone statues.
  • Adaptational Wimp: Subverted. Despite he's just yet another Monster of the Week here, he's actually no less strong than his Frontier counterpart and defeats all of the party's Adult forms with no effort otherwise. The only reason Hiro wins is because he has his own ultimate in the form of Cannoweissmon, unlike in Frontier where the Legendary Warriors run into him at a time when they can only transform into Adult-tier Digimon.
  • Berserker Tears: Constantly sheds these as he attacks Hiro, BetelGammamon, and TeslaJellymon, upset that he's forced to fight them to protect what he views as a noble goal.
  • Changed My Mind, Kid: When the cave begins to collapse, Gigasmon opts to accept his fate, but Hiro ignores him to help BetelGammamon and TeslaJellymon support the cave's pillars to save all of the petrified victims. Seeing Hiro persevere in helping, despite not having the strength of a Digimon, and being unwilling to abandon his friends to save himself is what spurs Gigamon into coming to the rescue to stop the cave-in. In the end, he leaves the heroes to see if there are other humans who are as compassionate as Hiro out in the world.
  • Crippling Overspecialization: His main style of battling by sensing his opponents' whereabouts before jumping out to attack them and then hiding back inside the ground works well in rattling the heroes' Digimon at first. However, Hiro notices that Gigasmon attacks whenever he hears any minor sound, without bothering to see if doing so would be advantageous. He also can't change direction in midair once he pops out to strike. Once Hiro, TeslaJellymon, and Canoweissmon take the fight to the air, Gigasmon is easily baited into trying to attack them and is repelled each time until he's defeated.
  • Combat Pragmatist: Despite his appearance suggests, he's very fast and stealthy in combat and tends to ambush the heroes' Digimon from behind or when they're unaware.
  • Demoted to Extra: In Frontier, Gigasmon is a part of the Quirky Miniboss Squad and a veritable threat against an underpowered team of Legendary Warriors. Here, he's just a Monster of the Week.
  • Dig Attack: Gigasmon's preferred method of attack is to burrow through the earth and sneak attack his opponents. This also extends to the stone walls and columns that fill the underground maze he has created, his power to liquefy pure stone allowing him to swim up them to get at any enemies that try to stay airborne.
  • Dishing Out Dirt: Can manipulate the earth itself to attack and quickly maneuver around. Besides attacking with pillars of stone from the ground with his Earthquake move, he can willingly sink into the earth as though it's a liquid, swimming around it freely, while also using it to form all-consuming blobs or sinkholes to abduct his victims.
  • Driven to Suicide: The conclusion of his battle with Cannoweissmon causes the cavern they're in to start crumbling down. Gigasmon was already driven to tears with trying to protect what he thought was a merciful goal from intruders but then sinks into outright despair, proclaiming that it would be better for all of them to simply die now than to await the end of the world humans would bring with their neglect. It takes Hiro's selfless heroism in helping to keep the cave stable to snap him out of it.
  • Dumb Muscle: Zigzagged. He's a combat pragmatist and is by no means predictable in battle despite his clumsy appearance, but that he was fooled by a movie trailer tells a lot about him.
  • Living Motion Detector: He possesses a very acute sense of hearing even when hiding underground. Hiro realizes that Gigasmon relies on the sounds made by his opponents in order to track their location before he lunges out at them.
  • Obliviously Evil: The only reason Gigasmon was kidnapping people in the first place was due to viewing a trailer for an environmental warning movie that exposed him to the environmental problems humans face in the world. Knowing that many humans would perish in the future, but that humans don't possess the innate reincarnation process of Digimon and Digitama, he turned to building a mass grave and petrifying whatever humans he could find to preserve them for the future. What makes this just Obliviously Evil instead of a proper Well-Intentioned Extremist however, is that he has absolutely no idea what he saw was still a trailer of a movie, and it worked a bit too well.
  • Our Giants Are Bigger: Unlike in Digimon Frontier, Gigasmon is exactly as big as his build suggests. His hand is huge enough to grab a full-grown human all by itself, and he's seemingly as tall as Canoweissmon.
  • Shout-Out: Just like Takuya in Frontier, Hiro distracts Gigasmon and fights him in a clearing. However, unlike Vitramon who doesn't want to burn a forest, Hiro doesn't want the battle to potentially injure or kill petrified civilians.
  • Spin Attack: His Hurricane Bomber attack has him spin like a top to deliver a powerful slam into his enemies with his fists.
  • Taken for Granite: Gigasmon can encase humans in his grip to stone with special blue dust, though the process is reversible. He can also do this to other Digimon.

    RareRaremon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rareraremon.png
"Live. Not enough. More!"

Voiced by: Yasunori Masutani
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attack: Digest, Decayson

An undead Digimon that, after its body had been somehow scattered and then dumped illegally in the woods, raised an army of zombies to regain its strength.


  • Adaptational Superpower Change: This RareRaremon is capable of controlling other beings by inserting part of its body into them, effectively turning them into zombies.
  • Bad Guys Do the Dirty Work: The two men behind the illegal dumping that led to RareRaremon forming are dispatched by it instead of ever encountering the heroes. After returning to the cliffside, some zombies scare them and cause them to tumble off the ledge, where they fall into the junk heap housing RareRaremon. It's highly implied the Digimon ate them here since they never show up again afterward. Considering the number of animals that died and humans that were endangered by their actions, they had it coming.
  • Blob Monster: It's a gigantic, zombie-making, mass of green sludge and machine parts covered in multiple toothy mouths and eyeballs.
  • Evil Smells Bad: RareRaremon has an absolutely insane stench that causes Ruli and Jellymon to instantly clench their noses in disgust and shock, even when they are observing it atop a cliff from a far-away distance. The reanimated corpses and zombies it creates in its wake also have the same putrid smell.
  • Horror Hunger: Constantly consumes nearby life to repair back its lost body, except it does not work.
  • Kill It with Fire: Canoweissmon kills him by detonating a gas canister onto him and causing him to combust from the inside.
  • Mercy Kill: RareRaremon's ordeal has left it little more than a living corpse with no reason or mind left. In the end, the heroes realize the only thing they can do is put it out of its misery and let it be reborn as a Digitama.
  • No Ontological Inertia: All zombified humans revert to normal when RareRaremon is killed. This does not revert humans that are turned into bones, however.
  • Technically-Living Zombie: For living in a perpetual state of irreparable hunger, it's considered already long dead.
  • Walking Wasteland: Any living thing that touches it gets corrupted by its ooze and zombified, while the gas it constantly emits with its Decayson technique outright kills them. It's for these reasons that RareRaremon simply can't be allowed to roam free.
  • Zombify the Living: It reanimates skeletons of dead people in a nearby cemetery to bite people and animals and infect them with strains of itself, turning them into zombies who will inevitably throw themselves into its maws. Given the whole town and the nearby database center were zombified before it was killed, if the kids and their Digimon didn't just happen to reach there and kill it in time, hundreds die.
  • Zombie Apocalypse: Turns humans and animals into zombies that constantly infect other living beings, which it lures into itself for consumption. Just like Salamandamon's minions, converted humans also cannot be obscured via the digital field.

    Doumon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/doumon_7.png

Voiced by: Hikaru Midorikawa
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Kimontonkounote  Jugonsatsunote 

An onmyouji Digimon whose powers of magic and illusion are channeled through rituals and paper talismans. He has a small army of shikigami at his disposal and wants to swell its ranks to restore the reign of past rulers.


  • Alternate Identity Amnesia: Once he's freed from possession, he only has memories from before being possessed.
  • Asian Rune Chant: He uses the Kuji-In to turn people into ofuda talismans.
  • Demonic Possession: Inflicts this on Hiro with a purple talisman, causing him to be possessed by a former ruler of the Hojo Clan. It turns out that Doumon himself was possessed by the spirits of said ruler's servants.
  • Familiar: He can summon shikigami with his ofuda and even turn humans into more of them. The visible difference between the two is that the regular shikigami are green while the ones made from humans are red.
  • Forced Transformation: He can turn humans into talismans, which he then turns into shikigami for his army.
  • Having a Blast: His Jugonsatsu has him throw exploding talismans.
  • Many Spirits Inside of One: Upon his defeat by Canoweissmon, the ghosts of the Hojo clan servants possessing him leave him and vanish.
  • Master of Illusion: He creates the illusion of immolating Hiro to disguise the fact that he teleported him to a local shrine. He also tries to create a large-scale illusion with his calligraphy brush, but Canoweissmon shuts that down.
  • Outside-Context Problem: While Doumon himself isn't out of the ordinary, he's not actually the villain in this case. The actual antagonist are the legions of vengeful ghosts who have possessed him. Unlike other antagonists, these aren't Digimon, but actual spirits.
  • Paper Talisman: Most of the things he does, he does with his own variety of ofuda. He uses a purple one to possess Hiro and green ones to create explosions and summon his own shikigami. Unlike in other appearances, the red ones are actually people forcibly transformed into shikigami.
  • Red Sky, Take Warning: When he's gathered enough casualties, the sky around Kamakura becomes bright red.
  • Reforged into a Minion: He turns people into talismans and then into shikigami.
  • Truer to the Text: Unlike the last time a Doumon appeared, this one is an actual onmyouji instead of a genre-standard illusionist and even ventured into the human world to further study his craft.
  • Vengeful Ghost: He's possessed by a number of these, who want to restore Kamakura Shogunate in the modern day by a supernatural force.
  • Zerg Rush: While possessed, his ultimate goal was to create an army of one hundred thousand shikigami and his own shikigami have enough force of numbers to make that possible.

    Calamaramon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/calamaramon.PNG

Voiced by: Kaori Nazuka
Level: Hybrid
Attribute: Variable
Attack: Nero Corso, Titanic Charge

An aquatic Digimon who believes spirals are the most beautiful shape in the world after manifesting in the human world through a gate in the digital world. Unfortunately, her obsession with spirals makes her want to twist everything (living or not) into a spiral-shaped form.


  • Acid Attack: Her Nero Corso is an acidic ink stream she shoots from her mouth.
  • Adaptational Attractiveness: Unlike her counterpart in Frontier, who was seen to exaggerated degrees as a borderline Gonk note , this Calamaramon is portrayed as cuter and more charming. The trend began in Digimon Adventure: (2020) who gave their version of Calamaramon an enchanting Siren motif, however.
  • Adaptational Superpower Change: This Calamaramon can twist the body of people, animals, and objects into spiral-shaped messes using some kind of magical ripples.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: Like Gigasmon, in Frontier Calamaramon is one of the members of the resident Quirky Miniboss Squad and one of its nastier members, being a vain and vapid Digimon who revels in her beauty and discards her fans without hesitation. In Ghost Game she's implied to be adversely affected when traveling from the digital world to the human world and discards her misdeeds to leave peacefully after defeat.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: Calamaramon doesn't so much think in "good and evil" as in "beautiful and not beautiful". She's turning everything into spirals for reasons heavily implied to be the gate she manifested from adversely affecting her, and turns good because she's convinced everything can be beautiful, not just spirals.
  • Body Horror: She can twist the shape of people, animals, and objects to turn them into spirals. It's seemingly harmless despite its visually horrible, but it does incapacitate her victims and is very agonizing. If pushed far enough, any affected objects will also instantly break off, and affected animals and humans remain within the Digital field, despite not being Mooks unlike Salamandamon's gecko people and RareRaremon's zombies.
  • Cute Monster Girl: A far cry from her portrayal in Frontier, Ghost Game's Calamaramon is shown as a beautiful female Digimon despite her monstrous lower half.
  • Spectacular Spinning: A firm believer of that, so much that she wants to turn the world into a beautiful place by twisting everything into spirals.
  • Spin Attack: Calamaramon's Titanic Charge has her leap in the air and spins like a drill. Unlike her Frontier counterpart, she has no issues controlling it.
  • Tentacled Terror: She's a Digimon with the lower body of a squid and the upper body of a woman who terrorizes an island by contorting objects and later on, even animals and humans into spirals.
  • You Don't Look Like You: Downplayed. In addition to the adaptational personality change and having slightly more attractive facial features than her Frontier counterpart, unlike the rest of her species she lacks the Facial Markings below her left eye.

    Oboromon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_oboromon.png
"Show me. Hoist it up, that which is [respective color], with both hands."

Voiced by: Volcano Ota (Red)
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attack: Yūgen, Chiyorozu-no-tachi, Rashōmon

A group of oni-like Digimon who hunt for unsuspecting passersby, impaling them with their swords and turning them into a thread. Turns out they were playing a game where the one who claims the most victims becomes the leader.


  • And I Must Scream: Oboromon's victims are not dead; they are skewered and placed right into a portal where their hands join each other. They also slowly melt and deform when they are suspended for a long enough amount of time.
  • Body-Count Competition: Non-lethal example; they are hunting down random passersby, impaling them with their swords, and sending them to a portal where their arms are conjoined. Turns out they are seeing who can claim the most victims where they will be absorbed into the scarf of the one with the highest "body count", who will become the "winner" and is crowned "king" by the others.
  • Cloth Fu: Their usual method of attacking other Digimon is to whip them with their scarf. After getting his scarf, the red one is able to wield it for his Yūgen attack and uses it with ruthless efficiency against an enraged Gammamon.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Their fight with GulusGammamon is less of a fight than GulusGammamon just brutally killing one and agonizingly tearing out the others' color wisps.
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?: The Oboromon's game of hunting random passerby brings into mind of the infamous Nanjing Massacre war crime where two Japanese soldiers had a contest to see who can kill the most Chinese prisoners of war during World War II. Not helped by the Oboromon themselves resembling macabre ghosts of fallen samurai.
  • Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: They stab their victims with their blades once they claim them. It's not lethal and doesn't cause any wounds. The red one is killed when GulusGammamon decides to return the favor.
  • Implacable Man: If one spots a victim, they will constantly chase and surround them until they show them the correct-colored items. If they don't they'll claim them in their body count. And they'll generally just ignore Digimon, since the humans are what they are going for.
  • Life-or-Death Question: If you get caught by one, they'll ask you to show them an item corresponding to their color. If you don't have any, they'll put you into their "body count".
  • Oh, Crap!: The group of five Oboromon were shocked when GulusGammamon starts to brutally tear into them, ripping their color wisps out. One of the survivors recognizes him after his little rampage, too. GulusGammamon's known in the Digital World as the Jet-Black Champion and has enough of a reputation that other Digimon fear him.
  • Oni: A Muggle mistook Oboromon as one of these when she asked Ruli for help.
  • Pocket Dimension: Each one keeps his victims in one of these that's his respective color.
  • Scarf of Asskicking: After winning their contest, the red one gets an extendable and prehensile one made from all of their victims. He uses it to brutally attack Gammamon and blow up a massive crater on the ground. It does him absolutely no good when GulusGammamon shows up, though.
  • This Cannot Be!: The Red Oboromon can only utter "I am king. How can I lose?" when GulusGammamon kills him.

    Eyesmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/eyesmon_9.jpg
Click here to see Eyesmon Scatter Mode 

Voiced by: Ryūsei Nakao
Level: Adult
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Gugen, Janengan

A parasitic Digimon who takes over people and uses them to feed on data. Kiyoshiro becomes involved with him after he takes over his classmate, Emma Hanes.


  • Adaptational Intelligence: The Eyesmon in Digimon Adventure 2020 is pretty much a destructive beast tasked to destroy Tokyo and create a false image of it to trick the chosen children. His Ghost Game incarnation is given proper characterization and dialogue.
  • Body Horror: His victims grow eyes all over their bodies. Initially it only causes severe pain when the eyes are touched, but the host's skin might peel off into eyestalks like Eyesmon's, and according to Ruli and Angoramon the host might die from this.
  • Combat Pragmatist: When he realizes he can't land a hit on any of the partner Digimon, he immediately tries to kill Hiro and friends instead to cut their power off at the source. When that doesn't work, he starts shooting lasers from the eyes he places on Emma, effectively turning a hostage into a weapon.
  • Demonic Possession: Those who are affected by Eyesmon become one of his conduits to feed on data. He will try to act like them, but it's not that convincing, and there are windows where the host regains consciousness momentarily.
  • Draconic Abomination: He's classified as a Demon Dragon Digimon, but he looks and acts less like a dragon but a vaguely reptoid living shadow filled with ominous red eyes that parasitizes humans and uses them as conduits for sustenance.
  • Expy: Eyesmon acts less like his Digimon Adventure: 2020 counterpart but more like Shademon from the Xros Wars manga, being a Puppeteer Parasite who is capable of Demonic Possession, stalking the shadows of its victims and completely take control of the consciousness of his hosts.
  • Eye Beams: His Janengan attack has him firing lots of beams from his eyes. However, in this case it's fired through the eyes on Emma's body.
  • Eye Scream: Double Subverted. His influence over his victims begins with him pulling their eyes off and leaving featureless skin behind, which he replaces with a pair of red eyes. Despite the replacement being bloodless and not causing any lasting damage, it's still shown to be very unpleasant. Trying to remove the eyes he places after is also quite painful.
  • Eye Spy: Replacing his victims' eyes allows him to do this, as do the eyes he places on them later.
  • For Science!: A variant. Eyesmon himself, once reduced to a single Scatter Mode and defeated, admits his only purpose behind his actions was trying to gain "knowledge", and he was just using others to get said knowledge for him, not caring if they died. Kiyoshiro even explicitly compares him to Emma in that he's ultimately just nosy like she is, hence why she made a perfect target.
  • Glassy Prison: The surviving Eyesmon Scatter Mode ends up being trapped in an insect enclosure and toyed by Gammamon.
  • Hive Mind: He's formed from a swarm of Eyesmon Scatter Mode, but he refers himself with a singular "ore-sama". His victims are also seemingly considered a part of himself and not individual minions.
  • Hostage Situation: Just like Salamandamon and RareRaremon, Eyesmon's victims remain in the Digital Field as extensions of himself. When dropping objects against the protagonists doesn't work, he crawls back into Emma's shadow and takes control of her body to cast Janengan.
  • Laughably Evil: When he's acting through Emma to hang out with Kiyoshiro he can come across as pretty entertaining. Otherwise he's a very disturbing Digimon, especially when inside the body of a policeman.
  • No Ontological Inertia: When he's defeated, the physical and mental effects he inflicted on his victims dispel automatically.
  • Pocket Dimension: Eyesmon can enter one of these through any shadow, from which he can see through the eyes of his victims.
  • Possession Burnout: According to Ruli, if a person is possessed by Eyesmon for too long, their body will disintegrate and they will die.
  • Power of Creation: Eyesmon can recreate any object he sees through his victims' eyes, including anything on a camera feed they might be watching.
  • Puppeteer Parasite: His victims seemingly become a part of Eyesmon himself, especially visible after he's defeated by TeslaJellymon where all of them are rendered limp like Emma was during the fight and regain consciousness after he's dispersed. He can also use their bodies as weapons.
  • Put on a Prison Bus: After the protagonists defeat him and contain whatever's left of him in an insect cage, Angoramon tells Gammamon that he's going to be put on community watch.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: His body is filled with sinister red eyes and he's an unpleasant, parasitic monstrosity. His victims also have red eyes, and this is not getting into the Body Horror he inflicts.
  • Shadow Walker: Eyesmon can dive into a person's shadow to escape and then emerge from another at will.
  • Stalker without a Crush: Someone who is possessed by Eyesmon will constantly attempt to snoop on things like other people to feed him. It doesn't look that bad for Emma because she just happened to be that type of person, but for his other victims it can come across as disturbing or uncanny.
  • Suddenly Speaking: The Eyesmon in Digimon Adventure: 2020 doesn't talk. In Ghost Game, he's quite talkative.
  • Virus-Victim Symptoms: People possessed by Eyesmon will have red eyes, and eyes grow all over their bodies until it covers their face. They will also become very nosy, excitable and obsessed with gathering data or snooping on others (although in Emma's case, this fails to alert the party at all because she's known to act like that). If it goes on for too long, their skin peels open to become eye stalks and the victim's body will disintegrate.
  • Youkai: In Eyesmon's datafile segment, Ruli explicitly compares him to the Dodomeki, a human cursed to become a youkai covered in bird eyes.

    Andiramon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/antylamon_1.png

Voiced by: Kenichi Suzumura
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Meditation Cure, Mantra Chant

A trio of rabbit Digimon that helped Hokuto repair his slipper back in the Digital World and traveled to the human world, where Jellymon helps them set up a site named "MY NO JE LL", also known as "Reward Elf". They can forge almost anything their client wishes for free. Unfortunately, there is a price — they create items by channeling spirit energy from buildings, causing them to rust and collapse.

The Andiramon seen here are of the Andiramon (Virus) variant, shown in the episode that they lack a scarf.


  • The Dividual: While there are three of them, they largely act as if they were one individual, with only the centermost one usually speaking for the trio.
  • Equivalent Exchange: They can create anything you want, but they can't make something from nothing. They create them using spiritual energy from an inanimate object, and they won't quit until they made every order come to fruition. This isn't a problem in the Digital World, where there's plenty of raw material to work with, but in the human world entire buildings can rust and collapse into smithereens because of their life-draining powers.
  • Extra-ore-dinary: Their Mantra Chant turns their arms to metal, allowing them to hit that much harder while remaining as flexible as flesh and blood. It needs to be applied to each arm separately, though.
  • Hair-Raising Hare: They are rabbit Digimon who can cause entire buildings to disintegrate by draining their life force and don't take anyone who interrupts their work lightly. In-battle, they're also incredibly difficult to take down and can outlast two Perfect Digimon for a seemingly indefinite amount of time.
  • Heal Thyself: As Hiro and Ruli find out the hard way, the Andiramon can use Meditation Cure to heal faster than Canoweissmon and Lamortmon can hurt them. Lamortmon and Canoweissmon team up to fight them only to be timed out and were almost defeated if not for Jellymon cancelling the orders on Fukatsu's computer.
  • Life Energy: Through channeling life energy, they are capable of creating almost anything. Unfortunately, they can also cause whole buildings to collapse this way. This isn't a problem back in the Digital World since they can create things from stone pillars or other objects that don't cause much harm even if they break down, but in the human world they resorted to creating the objects by draining energy from entire buildings. Naturally, this doesn't end well.
  • Not Evil, Just Misunderstood: As far as they're concerned, they're just doing as they've been requested: creating objects people desire and using whatever material they can find to do so, something spurred on by Hokuto praising their fixing his sandal and saying everyone would appreciate their help. The only reason they refuse to stop and attack the heroes is because of their abiding by contract they had Jellymon draw up, stating they can only cancel an order if the customer themselves cancels it. Once they do stop however, they make clear they just wanted to help people, prompting Kiyoshiro to let them work at a recycling plant he helped build to get rid of excess trash.
  • Our Elves Are Different: They were mistaken for elves by a couple and Ruli. note 
  • Sizeshifter: They can shrink to sneak into buildings. When outside or battling, they can revert themselves back into their usual size.
  • The Stoic: All three of them are almost emotionless and robotic, only displaying Tranquil Fury when their services are interrupted.
  • Unstoppable Mailman: They won't back out of their orders no matter what. Not even two Digimon of their level can. The only way to stop them from "delivering" the goods is to cancel all of them.

    Publimon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/publimon.png
"Sensational."

Voiced by: Kappei Yamaguchi
Level: Adult
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Dual Pressure, Jukerack

A Digimon that is a self-described journalist, sending out his articles as PubliNews before personally causing the events in the articles. The initial articles are pointless coverages, but if anyone dares criticize him for that, he will try to gravely injure or kill them on the next day.


  • Assassin Outclassin': His assassination attempt against Anna was thwarted by Hiro and KausGammamon and led to his death.
  • Berserk Button: If someone calls his coverage boring (despite they are pretty much pointless/sensational coverage about trivial pranks), he'll be pissed off and jump straight into trying to get them hurt or killed on the next day.
  • Calling Card: PubliNews doesn't predict the future despite initial assumptions. It's actually Publimon announcing who he's going to target next.
  • Disney Villain Death: Publimon accidentally destroys his own parachute without noticing and only realizes it when he hits the ground and dies.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: It doesn't take much for him to outright resort to murder. Simply committing the grievous sin of calling his articles boring reads will do.
  • If It Bleeds, It Leads: An invoked example. He writes articles, usually about someone getting hurt, and then makes sure the events decried happen.
  • Immoral Journalist: Exaggerated. In order to attract an ever-larger following, he writes articles that are pretty much death threats before trying to kill or injure the person featured on the article. He's not above straight-up murdering celebrities.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: When trying to cut KausGammamon with Jukerack, he accidentally cut his parachute instead, causing him to die instantly by plummeting into the ground.
  • Karmic Death: He tried to kill Anna by sending her falling to her death. He accidentally destroys his own parachute, resulting in that fate happening to him.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: For trying to kill Anna by dropping her into the ground when she called his prank newsletters boring, he's the only one who died by falling off from the sky because he accidentally cut his own parachute with his Jukerack attack.
  • Macross Missile Massacre: His Jukerack attack has him creating numerous paper airplane-like projectiles that home onto his targets to cut them.
  • Made of Iron: Subverted. He seemingly survives hitting the ground at high speed, but he doesn't.
  • Not So Omniscient After All: Despite people believe that PubliNews predicts future events, it's just Publimon attacking them personally. Therefore, it can be stopped midway and fail to do any major damage as he intended.
  • Ominous Visual Glitch: Often, the victim's sole warning that Publimon is moments away from attacking them is their phones glitching out with noise, then switching automatically to the PubliNews site showing the article about them.
  • Original Generation: He's a wholly new Digimon created for Ghost Game without appearing in previous media.
  • Paper Master: His Jukerack attack creates paper airplanes and uses them as homing missiles.
  • The Power of Creation: His preferred method of pulling his schemes is to manifest limbs out of nowhere, allowing him to injure or kill people from anywhere he wants to.
  • Sinister Surveillance: He seemingly knows where his readers are no matter what. This allows him to know who's dissing his articles and target them from almost anywhere.
  • Skewed Priorities: He's so focused on making sure his article comes true that he didn't notice that he damaged his parachute or that he was plummeting to the ground until it was too late.
  • Super-Persistent Predator: He will try to hurt or kill his targets no matter where they are. The only reason he failed to kill Anna was because he accidentally killed himself instead.
  • Villainous Breakdown: Once KausGammamon saves Anna, he goes berserk and continuously tries to attack them and never realizes he's falling to his death.

    Oleamon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/oleamon.png

Voiced by: Haruna Ikezawa
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Jameal, Leafred

A flower Digimon who targeted Kotaro for her prey because Hiro's dad told her that her cuisine sounded like "someone who didn't take a bath for a while".


  • Blade Below the Shoulder: Instead of launching dozens of sharp leaves, she can also use Leafred to shape her hands into clusters of leafy blades. Kotaro was almost diced up by her until SymbareAngoramon stopped her.
  • Eyeless Face: Her face is a flower with no eyes and sharp teeth.
  • Flechette Storm: Her Leafred attack has her fire a constant stream of sharp leaves from her arms.
  • Green Thumb: As befitting of a carnivorous plant Digimon, Oleamon is able to control plants. She ambushes the entire group when they spy on her by manipulating the weeds of the nearby plaza into a mass of greenery that engulfs them whole, then ties them up with vines while they're unconscious. While the vines that assault Kotaro throughout the episode also hint at this, those are revealed to just be hallucinations instead of actual plants.
  • I'm a Humanitarian: While her target in the episode is a human, she'll gladly eat other Digimon too if they're smelly enough.
  • Lethal Chef: She prefers to make food that most anyone else finds unbearably foul. At the end of the episode, she's started a Cooking Show with a focus on deliberately disgusting food.
  • Literal-Minded: She was only there to eat humans because Hiro's dad told her that her cuisine "smelled like someone who didn't take a bath for awhile" after eating her cuisine. She took it literally and was barely stopped from a body count because the trio and their Digimon filled her in.
  • Logical Weakness: As a plant Digimon with a taste for stench, she's weak to deodorant. It's exploited by Ruli, SymbareAngoramon and TeslaJellymon, which allowed BetelGammamon to beat her despite the power difference.
  • Man-Eating Plant: She tried to eat Kotaro because she heard Hokuto say that her food smelled like someone who hasn't taken a bath for a while.
  • Mind Rape: Oleamon marks her victims with a budding flower on their neck, causing them to be inflicted with hydrophobia courtesy of hallucinations. Because the victims will not take a bath in fear of being haunted by Oleamon, they will smell and she will arrive to eat them a few weeks later. The flower will bud at this time and the victim will become brainwashed to follow her.
  • Plant Person: Unlike most other Digimon that fit this trope, her design places more emphasis on the plant part than the person part with an Eyeless Face in the center of her flower and hands made of hardened leaves.
  • Only One Who Likes Spam: She has a unique taste for smelly food.
  • Original Generation: Just like Publimon right before her, she's a Digimon introduced specifically for Ghost Game with no announcements prior.
  • Overly-Long Tongue: Oleamon's tongue extends a few feet out from her mouth when she unfurls it, using it to implant her hallucinatory flower-buds when making contact with her prey's neck. Its appearance when extending out from her petals makes it resemble the stigma of a flower.
  • Stringy-Haired Ghost Girl: Oleamon has a tendency to ambush or check potential prey by dangling from the ceiling, making her resemble one. When she attempts to sneak on Ruli in the bathhouse and gets spotted, Ruli reports to Hiro and Kiyoshiro that she saw a woman with long hair and a long tongue.
  • To Serve Man: An example in this series that isn't outright malicious. She only tried to prey on Kotaro because she misheard Hokuto's words and is barely stopped from doing so.

    Nanomon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nanomon.png

Voiced by: Bin Shimada
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
A tiny, robotic Digimon who implanted Shadramon's dying body into Kiyoshiro's friend Tamotsu just to see if Digimon can really gain eternal life by reincarnating into humans in a bid to render himself immortal.
  • Adaptational Villainy: The Nanomon that appeared in Adventure just wanted his vengeance against Etemon, and the one in Adventure: 2020 was found to be controlled by Soundbirdmon. This one is a Mad Scientist who seeks to render himself immortal under the expense of other Digimon and humans, with no proof that he's operating on Blue-and-Orange Morality.
  • All for Nothing: Implied. After Thetismon separates Shadramon from Tamotsu's body, Shadramon disintegrates instantly, indicating that his plans to attain virtual immortality wouldn't have worked in the first place.
  • For Science!: His plants Shadramon in Tamotsu's body just to see if he could plant himself in a human's body and become immortal.
  • Hostage Situation: Since he's too small to directly fight, he instead takes control of Shadramon through Tamotsu's body and drills the latter's ear to force Shadramon to attack. Because of this the protagonist's brute force attacks will assuredly harm innocents, leaving extracting Nanomon out of Tamotsu's ear the only option to deal with him.
  • Immortality Immorality: He was finding a way to avoid being reduced into a Digi-egg upon death and thus retaining all the memories he has in his current life. To this mean, he captured a dying Shadramon and inserted him onto Kiyoshiro's friend, causing nothing but agony for both of them. He also doesn't mind if his experiment failed because he could kill both afterwards.
  • Immortality Seeker: He wants to defy the memory loss caused by a Digimon's Born-Again Immortality through implanting himself into a human and breaking out from them, using a dying Shadramon as a test subject to see if it works.
  • Glassy Prison: He ends up being extracted from Tamotsu's body by TeslaJellymon (using Espimon as a magnet) and contained within a petri dish, which was retrieved by Black Tailmon U ver.
  • Godhood Seeker: He believes that if his experiment succeeded, his intelligence and existence will surpass the gods.
  • Mad Scientist: He implants Shadramon into Tamotsu to see if Digimon can avoid memory loss post-death by using humans as incubators, not caring about the pain and suffering this does to both of his subjects. He also didn't perform the experiments for the sake of other Digimon, he just wanted to become virtually immortal by taking over humans himself.
  • Nanomachines: In previous seasons, he's around the same height as a human child's leg, sometimes more. Here, he's small enough to fit into a human ear and contained in a Petri Dish like what his name suggests.
  • Nothing Is Scarier: It's not explained how and why is he fully physical. He only targeted a single person and Digimon with no evidence or hints that he did something else, so it's just concerning that he's fully materialized given most other solid Digimon had attained that status by spending enough time in the human world or reached there by causing enough harm, often through explicit or implied murder.
  • Not-So-Well-Intentioned Extremist: He wants to find a way for Digimon to retain their memories after they die by implanting them into humans, but instead of applying his research to help other Digimon, he only wants to render himself immortal by entering the bodies of humans. He also plans on killing both Tamotsu and Shadramon when they're done for.
  • Puppeteer Parasite: He can control Shadramon to attack the party by drilling into Tamotsu's ear.
  • Put on a Prison Bus: After being extracted from Tamotsu, Mummymon places him in a petri dish, which was carried back to the Digital World by Black Tailmon Uver.
  • Signature Laugh: He has a signature chuckle, "Gigigigigi~". Also overlaps with Giggling Villain and Verbal Tic.
  • Soul Jar: He turns Shadramon's data into a "Memory Seed", which he implants into Tamotsu.
  • Verbal Tic: He ends most of his sentences with "~gya".
  • Weak, but Skilled: Unlike other Perfects the party gets into trouble with, he's not that durable physically and a makeshift magnet made from Espimon and TeslaJellymon can extract him and knock him unconscious. However, he can control his hosts to use their attacks, and his small size and the fact that he's taking a human and a Digimon hostage when fighting means that the party can't just take him head on.

    Chamblemon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chamblemon_8.png

Level: Adult
Attribute: Virus
Attack: Sweepore, Champignon Bomb

A group of four mushroom Digimon who has been abducting people in a nearby wedding site and using them as mushroom farms.


  • All There in the Manual: This group of Chamblemon doesn't have a good grasp on what makes them stronger. They initially believe that it was the feeling of despair their victims suffer from, but after eating several mushrooms on Ruli and noticing the Digivice on her wrist, they believed that anyone with a Digivice will make them stronger, which is seemingly advicated when they eat mushrooms on Hiro (another person with a Digivice). But when they consume the mushrooms on Kiyoshiro (another person with a Digivice), it's clear that this isn't the case because eating them reverses the power-ups they got from Hiro and Ruli and gives them weird side-effects. As the Digimon Reference Book suggests, it's the vitality of their victims that make the Chamblemon stronger, meaning that mushrooms from determined and brave people like Hiro or Ruli give them strength, but those grown from a Cowardly Lion who constantly freaks out over minor incidents like Kiyoshiro become poisonous to them.
  • Asshole Victim: Considering how they enjoyed brutalizing their victims to grab the mushrooms from their bodies as food, when the Geremon take them away to pull the exact same thing on them you can't be feeling sorry for them.
  • Cold-Blooded Torture: The Chamblemon sedate innocent woman with their spores, take them into their lair and gleefully pull mushrooms off from their bodies to eat, while delighting the pain their victims are suffering. In an unusually egregious case for Digimon standards, the torture is even shown multiple times on-screen.
  • Emotion Eater: Downplayed. Negative emotions from strong-willed people give the mushrooms they grow a better flavor.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: They infect Kiyoshiro and eat the mushrooms grown from him because they thought they are empowered by eating mushrooms from people with Digivices. Since it's heavily implied that it's someone's vitality that makes these mushrooms delicious and empowering for them, they weaken them instead. Meanwhile Kiyoshiro eats these mushrooms and quickly recovers from his condition and snaps Jellymon out from it too.
  • Hollywood Hacking: According to Kiyoshiro they are apparently smart enough to hack into the wedding venue's website to locate potential victims.
  • Human Resources: Grows mushrooms on people's bodies using their spores. The victims will generally be too weak to resist, and pulling the mushrooms is agonizing for them. Just like Asuramon's masks, eating mushrooms from people who have stronger vitality like Hiro or Ruli grants them strength, but mushrooms from people with weaker willpower like Kiyoshiro weaken them.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: They've been using people as mushroom plantations. A group of Geremon drags them away and turns them into their plantation once Thetismon takes them down.
  • Mushroom Man: Way nastier than your garden-variety Mushmon.
  • Near-Villain Victory: The group of four managed to make Hiro and Ruli their victims and crippled Kiyoshiro, Angoramon and Espimon using their spores. Had they not mistakenly thought that anyone with a Digivice is going to make them stronger and ate Kiyoshiro's mushrooms or the only person left to save the rest of the group didn't just happen to be a Cowardly Lion, the whole group would had been defeated.
  • Original Generation: The third Digimon to make its first appearance in a Ghost Game episode in the space of a month.
  • Power-Up Food: After binging on the mushrooms that grow on Hiro and Ruli, they become way larger and manifest themselves as physical entities. In this form, they can blow huge craters on the ground with their fists and overwhelm Angoramon with Sweepore (which they can't do before that). Thankfully, it comes undone when the mushrooms on Kiyoshiro's body poisons them.
  • Sadist: And some of the worst examples in the Digimon franchise itself at that. Ripping off even one mushroom from a victim causes them great pain, but the Chamblemon enjoy ripping a bunch off from their bodies quickly and mercilessly, something that they did multiple times throughout the episode. Very few antagonists in the franchise commit torture on this level, not even standouts like Adventure's Vamdemon.
  • Self-Disposing Villain: By all means they induced a virtual Total Party Wipe on the protagonists and won. They were only defeated because they hit Kiyoshiro with Sweepore and ate the mushrooms on his body, poisoning them and undoing their power-ups while Kiyoshiro can eat them to undo the weakening effects and power-up Jellymon instead.
  • Villains Want Mercy: After the entire episode of abducting innocent women to torture and harvest mushrooms from their pain including the child protagonists, they beg said protagonists for help as they themselves are being taken away to suffer the same fate by the Geremon.
  • Would Hit a Girl: They camp near a wedding site and abduct any brides they come across to torture them for food.

    Witchmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/witchmon_26.png
Chernik chernika, pay me respect. Now, wake into your true form.

Voiced By: Megumi Han
Level: Adult
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Aquary Pressure, Baluluna Gale

A Witch Digimon who went into the human world in the day of Halloween where her magic is the strongest to Take Over the World by turning anyone wearing a witch costume at that time into witches with her own powers. She and her minions also turn anyone not in a witch costume into rats and summon cat familiars to eat them.


  • Adaptational Badass: By all means this is an Adult tier Digimon, but unlike most cases her scope of harm explicitly encompasses the whole city, successfully turning everyone wearing a witch costume there into her minions and whole swathes of passerby into rats, and it mandates Canoweissmon for Hiro to even have a shot at defeating her. On top of that, she also sent Pumpmon, another Perfect, flying without much issues. Justified though since it's suggested that she isn't supposed to be this strong normally, but her magic heavily increases in Halloween and allows her to pull such feats.
  • Blow You Away: Baluluna Gale has her unleash a blast of wind from her hand to send her opponents flying.
  • Brainwashed and Crazy: Unlike other Mook Maker Digimon, Witchmon seemingly just brainwashes her victims by stuffing eyeballs into their mouths. She prefers targeting people in witch costumes that way. Brainwashed victims become literal witches who can use Witchmon's attacks and powers. Notably, Aoi and Shiori recognize Ruli even after getting brainwashed, unlike other converted entities who are mindless or close to mindless.
  • Cats Are Mean: Has a wisp-like black cat as a familiar and her witch minions get cats of their own, which they use to gobble up anyone they transform into a rat. Witchmon's cat in particular always lingers at her side like a pet, never participating in combat directly.
  • Cute Monster Girl: Aside from her pale skin and sharp teeth, Witchmon is pretty adorable for a female Digimon.
  • Fantastic Racism: Downplayed. Once everyone figures out her motivation was I Just Want to Have Friends, they ask her why she didn't just become friends with humans. Her only response is that humans are boring, hence her turning people into witches like herself.
  • Forced Transformation: She and her minions can turn people into rats. They prefer to turn people not in a witch costume into one, then devour them with their cat familiars.
  • Hand Blast: Both of her attacks involve her unleashing streams of wind and water magic from her hand.
  • Hidden Depths: For whatever reason, she recognizes Gammamon as the "Dark Conqueror"note .
  • Hour of Power: In Halloween, her magic is strong enough to cause city-wide chaos, create a massive castle above the sky and knock out Perfect-tier Digimon. This comes undone when the day ends.
  • Icy Blue Eyes: She has a pair of light blue eyes. Those who are affected by her powers also get their natural eye color replaced with the same color as hers.
  • I Just Want to Have Friends: After she's defeated, Witchmon tells Pumpkinmon that she just wanted to have friends in the form of witches.
  • I Surrender, Suckers: Tries to pull this off once Cannoweissmon bests her. Thankfully, Halloween just happen to end when she tried it, so everything she set up comes undone entirely and she had to surrender for real.
  • Lighter and Softer: Despite the grand scope of her plans, compared to the episodes before her that regularly have disturbing Digimon attacking in equally disturbing ways, whatever she instigated it's visually way less horrific than well, people turning into living mushroom logs and brutalized or having red eyes grow all over their bodies and mind controlled/influenced into becoming creepy stalkers.
  • Making a Splash: Her Aquary Pressure attack launches a blast of water from her hand. Thanks to the power boost granted by Halloween night, Witchmon's attack is able to punch holes through solid buildings.
  • No Ontological Inertia: When her magic wears off at the end of Halloween, all victims she has claimed (witches or rats alike) are reverted to normal and teleported out of the Digital Field, and the castle she and her followers set up on top of the city vanishes.
  • Power Makes Your Voice Deep: For most of the episode, Witchmon and her minions speak in a low voice. However, after she got De-Powered after Halloween ends, she speaks in a voice akin to a smitten teenage girl.
  • Powers via Possession: The girls converted into witches are not only granted flight (via objects like brooms and umbrellas), cat familiars, and transformation spells, but also gain access to Witchmon's Aquary Pressure and Baluluna Gale attacks.
  • Take Over the World: Her goal is to take over the world with witches.
  • Undeathly Pallor: She has abnormally pale skin. Anyone she turns into witches also have their skin turn pale.
  • Wicked Witch: A Witch Digimon who wants to take over the world with witches in Halloween, turns random passerby into rats to be eaten by cat familiars and is generally a prideful and unpleasant individual (well, at least until her field day ends). Appearance wise she's not as stereotypically awful, but her mouth is quite disproportionately large and filled with Scary Teeth, making her look a bit off.

    Pucchiemon / Meicrackmon Vicious Mode 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pucchiemon.png
Click here to see Meicrackmon Vicious Mode 

Voiced by: Kaede Hondo
Level: Armor (Pucchiemon) /Perfect (Meicrackmon Vicious Mode)
Attribute: Free (Pucchiemon) / Unknown (Meicrackmon Vicious Mode)
Attacks: Heartner Beam (Pucchiemon) / Felt Made, Cursed Claw (Meicrackmon Vicious Mode)

Pucchiemon is a fairy Digimon who fell in love with Riku Fukatsu. Unfortunately, her concept of "love" involves paying someone back with the exact same thing or more and involves Exact Words that needs Riku to do things he can't do as a human. After a while of hanging out, she evolved into Meicrackmon Vicious Mode in front of Fukatsu and goes into a rampage chasing him after she tried to pull his ears and claws as gratitude.

Her Evolutions are as follows:

  • Perfect: Meicrackmon (Vicious Mode). This monstrous feline Digimon is a Yandere who will reach extremes to get Fukatsu to reciprocate her feelings.

  • Adaptational Intelligence: The Meicrackmon: Vicious mode in Digimon Adventure Tri. is a rampaging monster with barely any discernable sapience. Here, she's a fully sentient Digimon who craves affection to an unhealthy degree.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: Downplayed. According to the Digimon Reference Book, Meicrackmon Vicious Mode are known to view the whole world as their enemy, and become omnicidal maniacs as a result. The one in Digimon Adventure tri. really isn't any better. While this one does go on a rampage after Riku is incapable of returning her love for him, she calms down once beaten, and instead runs off heartbroken upon realizing Riku is now terrified of her.
  • Adaptational Wimp: The Meicrackmon Vicious Mode in Tri. is capable of destroying entire cities and infecting hordes of Digimon with The Virus all by herself. This one can only chase a boy to the other side of a town before she's stopped. She also doesn't display as much resistance as her Tri. counterpart, who required Ultimates to even beat.
  • Affectionate Nickname: She asks everyone to call her "Pucchie" as Pucchiemon and "Mei" as Meicrackmon Vicious Mode.
  • Back for the Finale: Episode 67 shows atop from skyscrapers she is following Riku who is mixing well with his peers.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: She believes that if someone were to be partners with her they should pay something back in terms of gratitude. Unfortunately, this often involves forcing Fukatsu to do things he literally can't do, such as casting Heartner Beam. She also never outright tells Fukatsu what she wants him to do, leaving him clueless until she (as Meicrackmon) starts pulling his ears and nails to make him look more like her.
  • Care-Bear Stare: Pucchiemon's Heartner Beam is one of these and an attack that she tries to get Fukatsu to imitate.
  • Cute and Psycho: Downplayed for Pucchiemon. She might be a cute and cuddly-looking fairy Digimon who clings onto Fukatsu, but she's not all that dangerous. The problems surface for real when she evolves, though.
  • Determinator: Nothing will stop her tracking down a terrified Riku trying to escape her. Even Hiro and co, are unable to keep up with her in the digital field they sent her to.
  • Does Not Know His Own Strength: After becoming Meicrackmon, she gains razor-sharp claws and greater strength, but fails to realize how much her new attributes intimidate Riku. She acts as if she was still an adorable fairy-like Digimon, but with her Literal-Minded nature and childish mentality, her attempts to make Riku look more like her (by forcibly filing his nails against a wall or pulling on his ears) would have seriously hurt him if he hadn't run away from her. It doesn't help that when she chases after him, she basically smashes through whatever is in her path.
  • Doppelgänger Attack: She tries one of these using Felt Made, but the copies get blown away by WezenGammamon.
  • Exact Words: What her concept of "payback" consists of. Unfortunately, it mostly involves things like getting Riku to cast Pucchiemon's attacks or crushing a can of apple soda with his hand.
  • False Soulmate: Subverted. Her understanding on love and friendship is warped because she doesn't know a human being isn't psychologically the same as a Digimon. She's right that if two people love each other, they should return each other's affections, but forcing herself upon someone else without even bothering to take what they can really do into regard isn't. Thetismon has to talk some sense into her that the differences between Digimon and humans and that her requests of Riku were unreasonable, but she took the other Digimon's words a bit too literally, so it breaks her into thinking Riku is far too different to ever think of her as a friend or partner instead.
  • The Fair Folk: Angoramon describes Pucchiemon as a "fickle, but ultimately friendly fairy Digimon" and assumes that it's okay for Fukatsu to hang out with her. It's initially Downplayed in practice since Pucchiemon is just a slightly annoying and clingy Digimon that doesn't cause much issues on her own. When she evolves however, it's a different story.
  • Gone Horribly Wrong: One of the very rare cases the protagonist's post-battle negotiations outright rubbed the Digimon the wrong way, instead of setting them back to the right track. She thought Riku was in her debt for not reciprocating like a Digimon would five times. Not realizing she terrified him, and in trying to mutilate his hands and ears to look like her, was stopped by Hiro and Kiyoshiro and subdued, their Digimon telling her that she can't force people to imitate her behavior, but she can still befriend humans. Unfortunately, she took their advice too literally leading her to believe that she and Fukatsu are too different to even be friends, let alone lovers. Seeing him afraid of her, she screams she hates Riku, before tearfully running off.
  • Humans Are Bastards: Was convinced about this after being defeated and declares she will no longer hang out with humans because she can't get along with them in front of Fukatsu with tears on her face.
  • Interspecies Romance: Deconstructed. She doesn't know Fukatsu, a human being isn't psychologically the same as a Digimon, and because she never at once outright tells what Fukatsu has to do and her demands are blatantly ridiculous, it results in a case of Gone Horribly Wrong.
  • I Just Want to Have Friends: The thing that drew Pucchiemon to Riku in the first place was her being lonely and seeing someone else who shares her loneliness, which is likely the reason why she's so clingy.
  • Love Makes You Evil: A sign that their relationship is becoming strained, and gradually toxic is how her love for Riku made her digivolve into Meicrackmon Vicious Mode, and not her more angelic counterpart. Unlike with Tri.'s Meicoomon, it's not a Dark Evolution but a flat out normal evolution.
  • Lightning Bruiser: Meicrackmon Vicious Mode is so fast and agile that Hiro and Kiyoshiro are unable to keep up with her, only for her to find and attack them instead. From that point, she easily delivers a Curb-Stomp Battle against WezenGammamon and Tesla Jellymon. It takes the combined efforts of Canoweissmon and Thetismon to subdue her and force her to listen to reason.
  • Literal-Minded: One of the reasons of her fallout with Fukatsu was because she took everything that Hiro said at face value and ignored their reminders that she can still hang out with humans without demanding them to do things that only Digimon can do.
  • Mad Love: Downplayed initially; the Pucchiemon Fukatsu encounters seems friendly enough that Angoramon believes there's not much issues with them hanging out, but she's very clingy and is secretly counting the times where he doesn't "pay her back" which involved getting him to imitate Digimon behavior and doesn't even try to get her point across him. Played straight with Meicrackmon, who doesn't even understand why Fukatsu was so freaked out when she tries to pull his nails and ears and was willing to chase him several street blocks away until she runs into Hiro and Kiyoshiro.
  • Mega Neko: Meicrackmon Vicious Mode is a feline Digimon that is larger than your average human.
  • Mistaken for Imprisonment: To stop her smashing through the city after Riku, Hiro sends her to the pseudo-digital plane. She panics when she can't find Fukatsu anywhere, then descends into a Violently Protective Girlfriend after realizing Hiro and Kiyoshiro were somehow responsible, but wrongly assumes they're holding Riku captive somewhere. In actuality she's the one imprisoned so the boys can try to calm her down.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: According to Angoramon, Pucchiemon are, while fickle, generally friendly Digimon that shouldn't cause any problems. "Pucchie" however proves unlike normal Pucchiemon, as she was very lonely before meeting Riku, and became obsessively in love with him after seeing him as a kindred spirit, to the point she evolved into Meicrackmon Vicious Mode just out of love for him.
  • Poor Communication Kills:
    • Based on her demands it would kill no matter what, but Pucchiemon doesn't seem to explain to Fukatsu what she wants him to do as payback. Turns out Pucchiemon demands him to reciprocate her love the same way a Digimon would - which is impossible for him. It led to Fukatsu being dumbfounded when she tells her that his kind gestures don't count, and in turn counts up to five times before she as Meicrackmon loses patience and begins manhandling him.
    • When Hiro and Kiyoshiro attempt to convince Meicrackmon to accept humans and Digimon are not physiologically the same but can still be friends, she interprets this as a dealbreaker for their relationship. To Hiro's credit, he realized where everyone went off the rails, and wanted them to all go together to make amends with Riku, but she was far too impulsive, having already caught up to Riku who was now too frightened of her. She realizes what she's done, but is also hurting too much to apologize for her behaviour and instead runs off crying. In the end, no one is happy.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Downplayed. She evolves into Meicrackmon Vicious Mode, a feral anthromorphic cat twice the size of an ordinary person and possessing great strength, but no matter her stage of evolution her behavior is heavily reminiscent of a lovesick schoolgirl. Her concept of love is also one based on a more literal interpretation of Equivalent Exchange, and leads to her having a violent meltdown when Riku can't return to her what she's done for him. She's not particularly malicious though, she just has Blue-and-Orange Morality. By the very end, she runs off crying and heartbroken over Riku "breaking her heart" once she realizes he's now terrified of her, behaving more akin to a child throwing a tantrum over a crush than anything.
  • Sickeningly Sweethearts: Even if Fukatsu was able to reciprocate her feelings, her behaviour was inappropriate in public places anyways and she's likely to make scenes in them, like demanding Riku to dance in a convenience store with her or spoon-feeding each other in the academy cafeteria.
  • Single-Target Sexuality: A red flag is raised when she's obsessed about Riku and no one else. Nothing else matters to her, and she seemingly doesn't bother to remember even the names of Hiro or his friends she was previously introduced to.
  • Slasher Smile: As Pucchiemon, she sports one of these when she's counting the number of times Fukatsu didn't reprociate her, in addition to her voice becoming distorted.
  • Stalker with a Crush: Dangerously clingy to Fukatsu and will follow him no matter where he goes. It eventually degenerated into a street rampage when she tries to make claws and pointed ears grow out of Fukatsu and he runs out of shock.
  • Suddenly Speaking: The Meicrackmon: Vicious Mode in Tri. doesn't talk. Here, she's perfectly capable of speech.
  • Vocal Dissonance: Even as Meicrackmon, she still speaks in Pucchiemon's voice at least until her rampage. It's effectively a monstrous bipedal feline speaking in the voice of a cute fairy.
  • Wolverine Claws: In addition to gaining natural sharp claws after evolving, she sports a pair of wrist-mounted claws made out of metal that she can unsheathe at will. Her Cursed Claw technique has her perform an X-shaped slash with them.
  • Yandere: In both her Pucchiemon and Meicrackmon forms, she's badly smitten for Fukatsu, asking him to perform acts that he obviously can't do as reciprocation. She fails to understand he can't do Digimon things, and as Meicrackmon tries manhandling him to change his appearance. When he gets too freaked out, she chases him across the city. Meicrackmon tries to reunite but realizes her love is terrified of her, their relationship ruined. She declares she hates him while sounding heartbroken and runs away.

    DarkKnightmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/darkknightmon.png

Voiced by: Kenta Miyake
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Twin Spear, Shoulder Blade, Undead Soldier

A knight Digimon who tried to enter a gate to the human world one day only for his head to be cut off by the gate. He went to the human world to find it and started stealing people's souls for clues. Hiro runs into trouble with him when his history teacher got it in a second-hand shop and he starts claiming victims from his school.


  • Adaptational Curves: His design and body proportions are somewhat different than that of past DarkKnightmon's. The shoulder pauldron that was initially SkullKnightmon's head is now larger and fully encompasses the shoulder. His arms are thicker while his legs are thinner. The crest on his chest is smaller and lacks the eye slots DeadlyAxemon possesses. His head/helmet has more gold coloration, larger horns, and the faceplate looks more demonic. His cape is more tattered, his waist is thicker, and his shoulder blade is smaller and less curved, making it more resemble a glaive than it's original axe/scythe head.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: As stated in the Digimon Reference Book and shown in the Digimon Fusion series, DarkKnightmon is a Digimon who will do anything to achieve its goals, which is even stated by Angoramon when Hiro and Ruli finds his head in under the history club's desk. When the protagonists encounter him personally, he's a surprisingly noble individual who complies to Hiro's demands to revert his victims back for his head and even after he was angered by how he's treated by humans upon accessing the head's memories, still takes his defeat well after being beaten by Cannoweissmon.
  • Artifact of Doom: It all began when his head ended up in the human world and was passed off from people to people, finally making its way to Mr. Okonoji who mistook it for a helmet. When he displayed it in front of a bunch of history club students in Hazakura Academy, DarkKnightmon starts hunting anyone who saw his head down one by one in hopes of them returning it back. Notably, despite his claiming of Kiyoshiro, he was not a member of that club, but just happened to enter the classroom where his head was in and laid his eyes upon it.
  • Berserker Tears: Upon remembering how his helmet was passed between various humans and sold away, he begins to angrily shed tears before going on a rampage. Granted, said humans had no idea that they were handling the head of a sentient creature.
  • Curse: His attacks were mistaken for a "headless ghost curse" and spread around SNS as an Urban Legend because he moves around hiding behind the souls of his victims, which take the form of headless ghosts plated in armor.
  • Defeat Means Friendship: Once Canoweissmon bests him, he acts as a Graceful Loser and admits to kids that their bonds with their partners have taught him something new about fighting to protect someone. He decides to make his leave soon after so he can continue his training, and vows on his honor as a knight to not attack any more humans, all while graciously accepting Ruli's offering him tape to fix his broken horn.
  • Graceful Loser: He's a surprisingly honorable individual despite Angoramon's initial assumptions. After Canoweissmon defeats him, he relinquishes his hatred against humanity and congratulates Hiro that battling him was a blessing and his ideals of fighting for the sake of protecting someone he loved is the knighthood he strived for. He then promises Ruli that he won't attack people anymore, tells her that he will honor his words and makes his leave.
  • Headless Horseman: Played With. Gotsumon mistakes him for a Dullahan because he saw a headless Digimon in black armor attacking a man on the streets. The Digimon itself has a head, but it's missing the moment Gotsumon saw him.
  • Honor Before Reason: To DarkKnightmon, the fact that he was helpless as his head was exchanged between human hands is a great stain on his honor as a knight, enraging him to the point of swearing vengeance on them all. When BetelGammamon and SymbaAngoramon defend their partners from him, he extends that vengeance to any Digimon that would dare to protect humans. It never crossed his mind that Mr. Okonogi and the previous humans don't even know that Digimon like him exist.
  • Losing Your Head: He lost his head when trying to peek out from a Digital Gate only for it to shut down and leave it in the human world. Since he's akin to Animated Armor, he's able to survive getting his head lopped off, but he's left wandering the human world trying to find where the hell it ended up, that being in Mr. Okonogi's possession, leading him to terrorize Hazakura Academy.
  • Off with His Head!: G-Rated example. If he spots anyone who saw his head, he will "decapitate" them and claim their soul, turning them into headless ghosts in knight armor. These are seemingly his extensions that can only tell someone to "return my (presumably DarkKnightmon's) head". It's non lethal and it only leaves his victims in a vegetative state with a red ring around their necks.
  • Ominous Fog: Your first warning that he's here to take your soul is when a white mist surrounds you.
  • Poor Communication Kills: When he runs into a victim, any previous victims he has claimed will ask for "my head". Unfortunately, nobody knows whose head they're specifying and by their knowledge, his victims only thought whatever they saw was a antique helmet and not the head of a sentinent creature. This leads to all of his victims telling the headless ghosts they don't know where the head they're asking for is, so he appears personally to mark them and steal their souls, then move onto the next person.
  • Portal Cut: This is how DarkKnightmon lost his head in the first place. While in the Digital World, a portal to the human world somehow opened nearby and he peered through the rift to investigate. The portal unfortunately chose that moment to destabilize, causing DarkKnightmon's head to be sliced clean off. Luckily, him being a Digimon made of Animated Armor meant that such an event wasn't fatal.
  • Your Soul Is Mine!: Takes his victim's souls and turns them into headless spectres in walking armor. Aside of their suit of armor, his victims still retain whatever they're wearing before being caught and their original voices, but are seemingly devoid of any free will and can only tell their victims to return what was presumably DarkKnightmon's head.
  • Zorro Mark: After he takes someone's soul, he leaves a red ring on their necks.

    Baalmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/baalmon.png

Voiced by: Takahiro Sakurai
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Free
Attacks: Guiltish, Kamiuchi, Leak Information

A Demon Man Digimon residing in a shrine in Kyoto who is also a self-proclaimed "God of Knowledge", hidden within his own book, the "Red Book of Appin". Fitting to his title, he is extremely proficient in academic knowledge. He took interest in Kiyoshiro after other students praise him as "the King of Knowledge" an autumn school trip, abducting him to play a game where if Kiyoshiro answers his question correctly he will give him a piece of his book that contains his knowledge and vice versa. After getting one page and obtaining wisdom, Kiyoshiro craved for more only to lose five games, leading to Baalmon draining most of his knowledge and making him outright forget people near him.


  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: To Baalmon, knowledge itself is all that matters, so obtaining it is paramount even if he need humans to make a Deal with the Devil that could kill them if they lose. However, what he considers "knowledge" only pertains to academic knowledge and logic, as he considers knowledge the key to understanding the universe, and considers things like trivia to be useless information. As such, he initially call off the game with Hiro and Ruli when he becomes enraged by their trivia, only to restart the game when Thetismon makes a logical argument against his ending the game. He ultimately admits defeat when he is forced to acknowledge that "knowledge" is ever evolving, and no piece of information is truly insignificant.
  • Deal with the Devil: He offers Kiyoshiro to a game of quiz after he spots him at the shrine in Kyoto. After that Kiyoshiro strikes a deal with him to return daily, only for him to be so good at academic knowledge that Kiyoshiro can neither answer any of his questions correctly nor ask anything he can't answer, leading to him stealing nearly all of his memories.
  • Fantasy Kitchen Sink: He's a Digimon based on an ancient Semitic god living in a Kyoto shrine and invokes vivid ancient Japanese imagery in his powers.
  • A God Am I: By all means he's just a Digimon, but he goes by the name "God of Knowledge" and constantly refers himself as a God.
  • Graceful Loser: Played with. Initially, he is outraged by the gang beating him by asking him "useless trivia", and tries to call off the game. After Thetismon reasons against this with logic and Kiyoshiro gains some of his memory back however, they beat Baalmon by proving to him that knowledge is ever changing, resulting in his admitting defeat, returning Kiyoshiro's memories, and deciding to return to Kyoto so he can continue to explore these new avenues of knowledge.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: A consequence of anyone losing his game is him stealing their memories, often of other people. At first Kiyoshiro forgets Fukatsu existed but still recognizes Hiro, but before Hiro and Ruli confront him, he lost so many games that Kiyoshiro fails to recognize everyone around him.
  • Not So Omniscient After All: He might be nigh-on unrivaled in terms of scientific and academic knowledge, but he fails when Ruli starts asking him pop quiz questions that he believes are unnecessary. This angers him enough that he attacks the party. Later, when Thetismon and Kiyoshiro ask him a question about Kyoto that he's absolutely certain he knows the answer to, they prove him wrong by revealing the answer had changed, specifically as a result of Kiyoshiro's actions from one of his donations, proving to Baalmon that knowledge isn't definitive and can change.
  • Paper Master: When using Guiltish, he can either use the talismans as projectiles or use them to summon counterattacks that nullify the moves of his opponents. BetelGammamon and SymbaAngoramon's fiery gale is extinguished by a torrent of water and Espimon's Mot Bomb is blasted by phantom copies.
  • Paper Talisman: His cape's interior is lined with them and his Guiltish attack has him toss handfuls of them at his enemies. He also controlled two real human ghosts with them.
  • A Sinister Clue: Wields his Dǎshénbiān sword in his left hand.
  • Someday This Will Come in Handy: Kiyoshiro is unable to win him in any games due to challenging Baalmon in terms of academics, but when Ruli and the others play his game they are able to stump him and recover Kiyoshiro's knowledge repeatedly by quizzing him on menial everyday tips and trivia such as Ruli asking what the best lighting conditions for a photo are, Hiro asking what commonplace item can be used to peel potatoes if you don't have a potato peeler available (a bottle cap), SymbareAngoramon asking him to quote lines from obscure samurai fiction, and Gammamon asking what you should do when your chocolate melts (have Hiro make you some more).
  • Soul Power: He's accompanied by two ghost servants, a girl and a young boy. Unlike most other Digimon minions, these are real ghosts he takes control of using talismans.
  • Super-Intelligence: Appropriately for a Digimon who calls himself a "God of Wisdom", he's incredibly proficient in scientific and academic knowledge, to the point that Kiyoshiro, who worked for supercomputers can't win any of his games bar the first one.
  • Truer to the Text: Contrary to his Xros Wars counterpart, he's a more accurate portrayal of the Digimon as according to the Digimon Reference Book. This is even reflected in his design, as his right arm lacks the shotgun barrels his Xros Wars counterpart had.
  • Your Soul Is Mine!: Angoramon states that Baalmon gives away knowledge to those who pass his challenges, but at the cost of eating away at their souls. Jellymon's plea to him about how draining anymore of Kiyoshiro's knowledge would in fact kill him (instead of leaving him as a mindless vegetable), implies that Baalmon was likely doing this in addition to siphoning away his memories.

    Moon=Millenniumon / ZeedMillenniumon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/moonmilleniumon_2.png
Click here to see ZeedMillenniumon 

Voiced by: Atsuki Tani
Level: Ultimate
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Time Destroyer

A Moon=Millenniumon that came out from a lab accident killed a researcher named Manami and took over her corpse. After absorbing the data from several humans in the vicinity and a group of nearby Evilmon and Tsumemon, it turns into ZeedMillenniumon, an apocalyptic abomination.

Its evolution are as follows:

  • Base form: Moon=Millenniumon: Its default form that emerged out from a laboratory computer, killing off one of the researchers and possessing her body.
  • Slide Evolution: ZeedMillenniumon: An apocalyptic abomination capable of destroying entire time-space continuums and seeks to destroy the world.

  • Adaptational Badass: A weird case where it has a comparatively minor role as a Monster of the Week, yet is capable of doing more harm in the long run than its Digimon Adventure: (2020) counterpart. To its credit, it did at least kill one person and put up a solid fight before it goes down.
    • In Moon=Millenniumon's case, in Adventure:, it was incapable of acting on its own, requiring entire armies to work on resurrecting it. Meanwhile here, it's capable of its own actions, making steps towards its resurrection via possessing Manami's corpse and sapping data from others to restore itself to its full (Albeit sealed) power.
    • In ZeedMillenniummon's case, Ghost Game makes heavy mention of its threat to all of time and space rather than just the Digital World like in Adventure:, and he's still portrayed as a world-wiping apocalyptic abomination. It's only able to be defeated thanks to Manami's consciousness directing them to attack his weak point, and even then, Hiro's group was only able to revert it back to a dormant Moon=Millenniumon upon its defeat. Compare this to Taichi and the other Chosen Children in Adventure:, who were able to flat out overpower it to a permanent defeat through a Combined Energy Attack with the whole Digital World contributing minutes after it's manifested from Millenniumon despite all the build-up.
  • Adaptational Intelligence: Zigzagged. This Moon=Millenniumon is nowhere near as creatively manipulative unlike its Digimon (WonderSwan Series) counterpart, but it's still smart enough to kill a person and take over her body to drain other's life force to fully manifest, showing a level of cunning that its Digimon Adventure: counterpart doesn't possess.
  • Art Evolution: A subtle one, but if one looks very closely, "http∶//digimon.net", the current web address for Digimon Channel is written on the bands wrapped around its body rather than the old "http://www.digimon.channel.or.jp" URL.
  • The Assimilator: When it's time for Moon=Millenniumon to manifest out of Manami's body as ZeedMillenniumon, it also takes the flock of Evilmon and Tsumemon pestering Kotoha's house into it.
  • Attack Its Weak Point: ZeedMillenniumon's weak point is Manami's consciousness, which is not a part of the Digimon and what it used to resurrect itself. Manami willingly lets herself get erased off, rendering the corpse a lifeless body and ZeedMillenniumon reverting to a dormant Moon=Millenniumon.
  • Breath Weapon: ZeedMillenniumon's left head breathes fireballs and the right head breathes a blast of ice shards.
  • Deadly Lunge: When it's about time for Moon=Millenniumon to show its true colors, Manami's corpse (which was previously slow-moving and janky) suddenly gains fluid movements and incredible speed, throwing itself onto Kotoha and Kiyoshiro to drain their life energy in quick succession before it breaks out of the window to absorb the Evilmon and Tsumemon and resurrects as ZeedMillenniumon.
  • Demoted to Extra: While Millenniumon's forms are typically reserved for a major role, being the Big Bad of the Digimon (WonderSwan Series), and the Climax Boss of Digimon Adventure: (2020), here it simply acts as a Monster of the Week, albeit an extremely threatening one whose power over time and space is well-stated.
  • The Dreaded: When ZeedMillenniumon shows up, Angoramon outright tells Hiro that this guy is catastrophic. Even right before that, you do see the black, beady eyes he hides under his fur (something that he does very rarely), showing that it's bad news.
  • Eldritch Abomination: Considering the subject, this is a given. It can open time-space continuums and seeks to escape and destroy the entire world.
  • Expy: Of the Onmoraki from GeGeGe no Kitarō, being a vicious entity who takes over the body of a human's loved one to feed on life energy. Their stories also end up with a Downer Ending where they are dispelled, but the bodies that they took over remain dead and their victims will have to deal with the grief and horror the incident left behind.
  • It Can Think: It's no Diabolical Mastermind, but according to whatever's left of Manami after it killed her, it was still smart enough to take over her corpse and act like her before seeing a crowd of us humans coming near it gave it a chance to do whatever it's trying to do much quicker.
  • Life Drinker: Sustains on the data of human beings to facilitate its resurrection, leaving its victims with blue erosion marks. It also drains their victims and renders them semi-incapacitated and allows the Digital Field to affect them even when they are technically not Digimon minions. According to Manami, ZeedMillenniumon drains the spirit of its victims in order to reconstitute itself.
  • Person of Mass Destruction: Angoramon makes it very clear ZeedMillenniumon is a walking doomsday capable of warping time and space. It's flat-out stated if the heroes don't stop ZeedMillenniumon, it can and will destroy the entire world. The heroes, even with two Megas, aren't capable of actually killing it outright, only targetting Manami inside of it and her demise taking ZeedMillenniumon with her due to it having used her to resurrect itself.
  • Pest Controller: Implied. It influences entire colonies of Evilmon and Tsumemon to flock around it just by walking around, hence the hauntings that accompany its presence in Kotoha's house. All of them lose interest and make their leave after ZeedMillenniumon regresses back into a dormant Moon=Millenniumon, suggesting that they are just wild Digimon that were being drawn next to it.
  • Possessing a Dead Body: Possesses Manami's corpse after killing her to move around Kotoha's home. After attacking several humans and absorbing their data, it absorbs the flock of evil Digimon near it and turns into a ZeedMillenniumon.
  • Sealed Evil in a Can: The heroes are incapable of actually killing ZeedMillenniumon, only reverting it back to Moon=Millenniumon and knocking it out again, with Hiro choosing to keep it around for safe keeping, and reassuring that he and the others will be able to handle it again should it ever break free.
  • Silent Antagonist: Downplayed. ZeedMillenniumon does make out loud roars, but it has no dialogue bar a barely-audible "Time Destroyer".
  • Telepathy: Despite ZeedMillenniumon doesn't say anything other than a barely-audible one-liner, Manami implies that it can communicate coherently through telepathy.
  • Trojan Horse: Moon=Millenniumon reanimates Manami's corpse as bait to place itself right inside Toru's house and acted like as if the reanimated corpse was still Manami, remaining completely undetected for ten days as it slowly kills its victim off. It's not until the protagonists paid a visit to Toru's house that it decides to show its true colors earlier than it intended to.
  • The Voiceless: Moon=Millenniumon itself has no dialogue. It does speak through Manami when it's still moving around Kotoha's house, though.
  • Would Hit a Girl: Moon=Millenniumon outright murders a young woman, takes over her corpse to move around, and attacks another girl before it evolves into ZeedMillenniumon.
  • Yin-Yang Bomb: It can fire ice from its right head and fire from its left head. This particular pair of Breath Weapons is never demonstrated by any of its species' other iterations.

Manami

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/manami_corpse.png
She's moving and speaking, but she's not exactly alive.

After a lab accident that killed Manami, Moon=Millenniumon took control of her corpse to walk around Tohru's house, tricking him into thinking Manami was resurrected so it can set out to destroy the world.


  • Came Back Wrong: The possessed corpse is rather...unsettling. Its movements are very forced and unnatural, it remains dormant save for at night and it sometimes lets out a rather eerie Slasher Smile. Everyone can see that it's wrong, but being grief-ridden, Toru doesn't care.
  • Glowing Eyelights of Undeath: Right before the body attacks Kiyoshiro and manifests as ZeedMillenniumon, it sports some very unsettling purple, glowing eyes.
  • Stringy-Haired Ghost Girl: Appears as a ghastly zombie with her hair down. There's something very wrong with this thing at a first glance that it can't be an ordinary person.
  • Slasher Smile: Flashes a very wide one at the start of the episode and before ZeedMillenniumon emerges out of Manami's body.
  • Undead Barefooter: Manami's corpse doesn't wear any shoes and walks around the house barefoot.
  • Undeathly Pallor: The body is long dead and it's just reanimated by Moon=Millenniumon, so naturally her skin is pale and cold.
  • Wham Line: When Tohru is embracing Manami's corpse and the trio, their Digimon, and Kotoha goes near his room to investigate, Manami blurts out this line which indicates something is horribly wrong. Then she starts attacking Tohru and several others before all hell breaks loose.
    Manami: "So many humans. I will get better...right?"
  • Wide Eyes and Shrunken Irises: Its default expression is a blank stare with incredibly widened eyes and small irises (much unlike when Manami was still alive), making it look incredibly creepy combined with its unnatural movements.
  • Zombie Gait: Manami's reanimated corpse moves slowly and turns her joints in a horrifically rigid fashion. It doesn't stop it from suddenly gaining fluid movements when Moon=Millenniumon decides to show its true colors.

    Evilmon & Tsumemon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/evilmon_8.jpg
A swarm of Evilmon
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tsumemon_5.png
Tsumemon — these are just A FEW from a massive horde!

Level: Adult (Evilmon), Baby II (Tsumemon)
Attribute: Virus
A large swarm of evil Digimon implied to be drawn by Moon=Millenniumon's presence and infest Kotoha's house. They were all absorbed by it when it turns into ZeedMillenniumon.
  • Adaptational Late Appearance: Tsumemon is the first Baby-level Digimon to ever appear in Digimon Ghost Game, making it so the second-lowest Baby II level appears much later than the highest Ultimate level.
  • Haunted House: Were responsible for the hauntings in Kotoha's house, as well as inducing nightmares on her and Kiyoshiro.
  • Mind Rape: The Evilmon can inflict terrifying nightmares on people they haunt, though it's a side effect of their presence rather than any active malice on their part.
  • The Swarm: These Digimon are responsible for haunting Kotoha's house and appear in massive flocks.
  • The Unfought: The party never fights them. Justified because they are heavily implied to be unrelated nearby Digimon drawn to Moon=Millenniumon and their hauntings are just them doing their own thing, and quickly make their leave after it's defeated as Zeed=Milleniumon.
  • Villainy-Free Villain: They aren't even worshipers of Moon=Millenniumon and are pretty much household pests doing their own thing, aside from that instead of household pests, they are evil Digimon drawn in by Moon=Millenniumon. The worst thing the Evilmon did was to haunt Kotoha's household and induce nightmares and the Tsumemon just cling to the top of the ceiling, but once ZeedMillenniumon gets defeated and is reduced to a dormant gemstone, they lose interest entirely and make their leave.
  • The Voiceless: None of them ever say anything.

    ClavisAngemon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/clavisangemon2.jpg "I am ClavisAngemon, enforcer of contracts! I provide a save haven in this world for wayward Digimon who have nowhere to go. Those who interfere will be purged like the contract breakers!"
Voiced by: Tomokazu Sugita
Level: Ultimate
Attribute: Vaccine
Attacks: The Key

An angel Digimon of contracts who is the safekeeper of a large group of lesser Digimon that occupy the apartment Aoi is living in. He and his Digimon reside within a subspace in the apartment taking the form of a 13.5th floor within the building. Unfortunately, the Digimon within the building has a tendency to intrude into the apartments of humans and he's willing to attack any intruders, causing many tenants to move away.


  • 13 Is Unlucky: He and his fellow Digimon reside within a hidden 13.5th floor, a subspace between the apartment he opened. Doesn't stop the Digimon from spilling into the other real floors, though.
  • Adaptational Badass: His Digimon Adventure 2020 counterpart was just a side character in a flashback who fought against Millenniumon alongside six other Ultimate holy Digimon. Here, he's a full-blown powerhouse capable of OHKOing Digimon of his level.
  • Adaptational Villainy:
    • Not just his species, but for the Angemon line as a whole. The Angemon line, including things like Seraphimon or Ofanimon, were often unambiguously at the side of good, and if they aren't, they were in their fallen forms. This ClavisAngemon is still "good" in a sense for giving Digimon a safe home, but he's willing to leave a bunch of humans tormented and packing for that.
    • As far as his species is concerned, his Digimon Adventure 2020 counterpart is one of the holy Digimon who fought Millenniumon in the distant past. Here, he's a Well-Intentioned Extremist who wants to give a group of Digimon a home by occupying and invading a condo and becomes a residential nuisance as a result.
  • Body Horror: When he uses "The Key" on a human, key-shaped holes manifest from that person. It's non-lethal, but it's frightening and the effects are physical. Furthermore, anyone affected remains in the Digital Field.
  • Cranky Neighbor: He and a large group of Digimon move into Aoi's condo, but the group he's safekeeping can slip out to attack random people. When the tenants get freaked out enough and move away, they move in to occupy more floors. He's also not exactly nice to anyone who steps into his own floor or tells him to stop.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: When the protagonists fight him, it's less of a battle than him just sealing them away one by one before Hiro evolves Espimon into HoverEspimon to cause a distraction enough for Siriusmon to recover and strike back.
  • Haunted House: More like "haunted condo", but the other Digimon do slip out on their own to cause incidents, and if anyone ends up in the floor where the Digimon originally reside in he'll attack them, with two on-screen victims. It went so bad that people start moving out (which he was fine with because the Digimon can occupy the emptied rooms) and it got spread as an Urban Legend.
  • Improbable Weapon User: His only weapon is a giant key and that's the very thing that makes him so threatening. When HoverEspimon takes it from him though, he's rendered powerless.
  • Invading Refugees: It's implied an episode later that he's actually sheltering a group of Digimon who evacuated into the human world to evade GulusGammamon's wrath.
  • Light Is Not Good: Downplayed. He's the first Monster of the Week that's explicitly a Vaccine-type Angel Digimon, which is very rare when most of the Digimon of the Week are Virus-type. But he's a Well-Intentioned Extremist who just wants to give other Digimon a safe home and falls into the "misguided Digimon" category, unlike the other Ultimates who intentionally bring harm to large areas.
  • One-Hit Kill: The reason why he's so difficult to deal with even for Ultimate standards is because his sole attack doesn't even do physical damage. It just flat out slows them down to a crawl and seals them away.
  • Pet the Dog: Notably, despite the pre-established animosity between angelic and demonic digimon, he's perfectly willing to allow demonic Digimon like Impmon into his home so long as he follows the rules.
  • Reality Warper: ClavisAngemon can create subspaces within buildings using his key powers. Using this he creates a hidden floor for other Digimon to live in, though it causes other problems.
  • Supernatural Sealing: His attack, "The Key" prevents opponents from moving. He will then trap them in an ice block which can't be removed unless he's defeated. Using this, he easily defeats Lamortmon and Amphimon and nearly defeats Siriusmon if not for HoverEspimon distracting him and unsealing Siriusmon.
  • Thinking Up Portals: He can create keyhole-shaped portals at will and uses them to move between the human world and the apartment's Pocket Dimension.
  • Urban Legend: Was the source of one known as the "Haunted Apartment" due to the Digimon he's housing spilling into other floors where people live in, and a few can sometimes end up directly in where he's living and he does attack intruders who just happened to stumble in.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He just wanted to give a large group of Digimon a safe home. Too bad it comes with the expense of the original tenants living there.
  • When All You Have Is a Hammer…: When the protagonists fight him, he only uses a combo attack where he opens a keyhole using his signature attack and locks them in solid in ice, sealing them away from existence. This is enough to take out Lamortmon and the Ultimate-level Amphimon on its own. Siriusmon doesn't fare any better until creative thinking from HoverEspimon's part allowed him to steal his weapon from his hands.

    Quartzmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/quartzmon_2.jpg "Time is treasure. Wasting time is a crime. You fools are looking to stop the flow of my time!"
Voiced by: Jurota Kosugi
Level: Ultimate
Attribute: Unknown
Attacks: Gypt Particle Cannon, Ruin Blast

A massive, plant-like Digimon who was sheltering a huge group of Baby-levels inside him. He was trying to feed them, but the methods he uses are...horrific at best.

Quartzmon is the last foe fought before the sequential episodes.


  • Adaptational Heroism: The original Quartzmon is a Generic Doomsday Villain who takes over the world and absorbs every living being into him for unexplained reasons. Here, he's a Well-Intentioned Extremist who only wants to feed a bunch of Baby Digimon he's housing inside him. It's implied that just like ClavisAngemon's incident, his incident is not random but a byproduct of GulusGammamon making his move.
  • Adaptational Wimp: In Digimon Xros Wars: The Young Hunters Who Leapt Through Time, Quartzmon required the power of the six heroes from past Digimon series to even have a chance of killing him and even then he still manages to take over the world and absorb all human beings and Digimon bar two. Here, he can be defeated by 2 ordinary Digimon of his level and is treated just like any other Ultimate for narrative purposes.
  • Beam Spam: His Gypt Particle Cannon fires huge arcing beams in all directions. Kiyoshiro has to activate his Phantom Zone before they hit the city below. Quartzmon can also use it as a Converging-Stream Weapon.
  • Belly Mouth: His mouth is actually located on his chest and can shelter numerous baby Digimon within it.
  • Body Horror: Victims who swallowed his clones eventually mutate into monsters that have Quartzmon's mouth and elongated limbs. It comes undone after the clones leaves the host's body, though the malnutrition effects remain.
  • Book Ends: The first hostile Digimon fought in the series is a Clockmon, a Digimon based on an alarm clock. Quartzmon is the final hostile Digimon encountered before the Myth Arc goes beyond Foreshadowing to surface for real, and is based on a quartz clock with a similar bodily build as Clockmon. Both of them also fear the Jet-Black Champion (though only implied for Quartzmon) and drained life force from humans. Also doubles as a Mythology Gag because a Clockmon did participate in the fight against Quartzmon during Young Hunters and this Quartzmon did meet Clockmon at the end of his debut episode.
  • Botanical Abomination: Not only he scatters his clones all over the city like they were seed pods (that he expects people to consume on accident), a close glance under his main body reveals it to be root like and hiding numerous Baby Digimon inside it. His Digimon Card Game counterpart is also classified as Green.
  • Creepily Long Arms: The arms on his main body is very long and lanky. Anyone who gets infected by his copies eventually grow similar arms before they faint from malnutrition.
  • Glasgow Grin: Anyone who gets infected by him also has their mouth turned into the same shape as his in their terminal stages of infection. It's a wide-open jagged jaw and just looks wrong when it's put onto Ruli. His Study File entry even has Ruli reference the Kuchisake-Onna.
  • Going to Give It More Energy: He tries to dispatch Canoweissmon and Thetismon by force-feeding them energy from his hands until they explode. It's an attack called Ruin Blast. They evolve before he can actually pull it off.
  • Horror Hunger: Anyone who accidentally ate his clones can't be full no matter how much they eat because said clones steal the food for themselves. Ruli in particular, becomes so desperate that she resorts to try eating Gammamon and Hiro before she collapses out of malnutrition and the Quartzmon copy makes its leave.
  • Mister Seahorse: He's actually hiding a huge group of Baby Digimon inside his mouth and the Great Evil Globe that he feeds through stealing food from people.
  • Multi-Armed and Dangerous: His arms can split into multiples just like his Young Hunters counterpart. They can also combine back into a pair of larger arms if they are tangled.
  • Palette Swap: His clones are pink versions of his much larger main body.
  • Puppeteer Parasite: Once his clones enter someone's body, they steal all of their victim's food for themselves, starving them. They can also mutate their host's mouth and arms to resemble Quartzmon's shortly before emerging out of them to return to the main body, leaving their hosts malnourished and near-death.
  • Shapeshifter Weapon: Shapeshifter Snare in this case. When Canoweissmon and Thetismon lead Quartzmon's arms into tying themselves into knots, he just melds them together and grabs the two anyway.
  • Tampering with Food and Drink: He scatters his copies from the sky which land on random places. Unfortunately, one of them landed onto a bowl of chocolate Ruli ate and it looks like the rest of the chocolate in that bowl but black in color, so it's very easy for Ruli to eat it on accident...
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He was actually trying to feed a huge pack of Baby Digimon that ended up in the human world (implied to be driven out by the infection GulusGammamon left like with the Digimon ClavisAngemon is sheltering). Too bad it involves risking the deaths of hundreds.
  • Virus-Victim Symptoms: Anyone who digests a Quartzmon copy will become ravenously hungry. At first they can be just mistaken for eating way more than usual, but then they'll succumb to maltutrition no matter what they eat and their bodies will mutate to resemble Quartzmon himself, at which the victims will go onto a rampage finding food for a while before collapsing because of maltutrition.

    Dagomon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dagomon_0.png "Eliminate."

Voiced by: Takashi Matsuyama
Level: Perfect
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Forbidden Trident

An Expy of the Dark Ocean Dagomon who beckons humans into becoming his minions, turning them into merfolk who serve him.


  • Adaptational Badass: Lampshaded and Invoked; Dagomon is just a Perfect-level Digimon and he's not supposed to be strong enough to affect entire cities (for comparison, the Dark Ocean Dagomon only affected a single person), something that Siriusmon lampshades. He's actually affected by the Black Corrosion, which explains how he was even able of pulling a scope of harm that far exceeds his level's standard and blackens mid-fight.
  • Body Horror: The transformation of a human into a Deep One is not pleasant. The victim's neck bloats and stretches in inhuman ways and gills grow out from it. Afterwards, the brainwashed yellow eyes they have become fish eyes and the skin on their head becomes green. Their hands also become clawed flippers.
  • Black Speech: Most of his dialogue is consisted of barely audible and indecipherable chanting, which can betwitch and transform humans. He does have a few one-liners, although they're barely audible and you'll need subtitles to even understand what he's talking about.
  • Brainwashed and Crazy:
    • His voice bewitches humans and makes them his servants. Over time, they become Deep Ones.
    • Implied for his case. He has unnatural red eyes and turns black after his illusion is dispelled and never seems to display any discernable intelligence. It's implied that he was affected by the Black Corrosion and went onto a rampage in the human world.
  • Clipped-Wing Angel: His giant form initially flat-out curb-stomps the protagonist's perfect-level Digimon using a combination of unpredictable attacks, intangibility, and brutal illusions. Once it's dispelled by Canoweissmon and the actual Dagomon shows up, he turns black and goes into a frenzy...only to be taken out in a single Break-Quasar from Siriusmon. He does attempt to go for a second round, but Black Tailmon Uver. and Cthyllamon expel him from the real world before he could.
  • The Corruption: It's implied he was empowered and corrupted by the Black Corrosion.
  • Fog of Doom: He's always surrounded by a thick fog and before his minions appear to capture people on land, they were surrounded by the same fog.
  • Forced Transformation: Brainwashes other humans and eventually converts them into merfolk.
  • Expy: Of the Dark Ocean Dagomon from Digimon Adventure 02. It hides behind a giant, black shadow of itself made out of smoke and turns other people into Deep Ones.
  • Javelin Thrower: His main attack method is to throw his trident, which hits foes in unpredictable directions. He then strangles anyone wounded by it with illusions of tentacles coming from their wounds. He does it again when his cover was blown, but it's effortlessly destroyed by Siriusmon.
  • Master of Illusion: He can create a massive, black illusion of himself that he hides behind and subjects the protagonist's Perfect Digimon to some brutal illusions of tentacles coming from their wounds. As a Shout-Out to Call of Cthulhu, the only way to free the hostages is to awaken them and roll a 2d10 die that decides if they'll be awakened.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: He's constantly seen with bright red, glowing eyes and he's a vicious Digimon capable of unleashing Ultimate-level scope of harm. It's implied that he was affected by something else and was going berserk at that time.
  • Shout-Out: The way Espimon breaks the trio of Digimon out from Dagomon's illusions is to feed Canoweissmon with plums, then roll a 2d10 to determine if the attempt is successful. This is the same way the Call of Cthulhu tabletop game determines if an action is successful.
  • With Great Power Comes Great Insanity: It's implied that he's not supposed to affect entire cities and curb-stomp multiple perfect-levels, but it's an effect from the black particles that infected him in the Digital World.
  • Zero-Effort Boss: Once the real Dagomon shows up, it's taken out by Siriusmon in one hit. He does try to spring back and attack, but it's stopped in time by Black Tailmon Uver. and Cthyllamon.

    Rafflesimon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rafflesimon.png

Voiced by: Akeno Watanabe
Level: Ultimate
Attribute: Data
Attacks: Ballet Gun, Wisselen

A once-noble Digimon who dies days after manifesting, she now seeks eternal life after being exposed to The Corruption.


  • The Assimilator: She uses the spores produced by her rafflesia flowers and her Wisselen skill to transform others into flowers themselves so that she can absorb them into her body through her sleeves, consuming them to extend her own life.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: She absolutely stomps over Siriusmon (the other protagonists were converted and consumed) and eats him...until GulusGammamon beats her down from the inside and releases the victims, causing her to wilt instantly.
  • The Corruption: She was suffering from the Black Corrosion's corruption, hence her abnormal behavior, blackened coloration, and unusual strength. Also worth noting is that Rafflesimon seemed to have been granted this power herself, having used her spores to mind-control Kiyoshiro and TeslaJellymon into her servants in order to gradually infect the entire group.
  • Foul Flower: An interesting case of this, as Rafflesimon is noted to normally be a pure and noble Digimon. Unfortunately, she's become another victim of the mysterious black corruption that's been tainting the Digital World.
  • Immortality Seeker: She desires to live eternally by consuming other humans and Digimon. It's a very odd thing for her species to do.
  • Hoist by Her Own Petard: Invoked by GulusGammamon, who volunteers himself to be fed to Rafflesimon through Siriusmon's body (Siriusmon talks in GulusGammamon's voice in that scene). When Rafflesimon consumes him, GulusGammamon beats her from the inside, freeing her victims and leaving her to rot and die.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: There's something very wrong with this Rafflesimon. SymbareAngoramon notes that her species are noble Digimon who die days after withering and her species is stated by the Digital Reference Book to be unconcerned with its short lifespan, so one seeking eternal life and the consumption of all things to that end is extremely off-character to the species norm. Just like the Dagomon before her, she's also pitch-black, unlike her species' vivid red color, implying that she's affected by the black particles that are destroying the Digital World.
  • Reflecting Laser: Her Ballet Gun fires orange beams of energy, but when she uses them in tandem with several glowing flower-shaped shields, she is able to reflect them off of them to attack from various angles. She is able to trap Siriusmon in a cage of lasers, preventing him from being able to help the poisoned Hiro and HoverEspimon.
  • With Great Power Comes Great Insanity: It's implied that she's not supposed to be strong enough to induce a borderline Total Party Wipe out of nowhere if not for the black particles that infected her.

    The Black Corrosion (Unmarked Spoilers) 

Regulusmon

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/regulusmonb.png "There are only two option in this world. Devour. Or be devoured!!"

Voiced by: Miyuki Sawashiro
Attribute: Virus
Attacks: Kalyp Bite, Gran TRACE, Dead-End Spike, Genias

An infamous Dragon Digimon known as "the Jet-Black Champion" who spread the Gulus Realm Burst black corrosion in the Digital World, and a social Darwinist who seeks to take over and demolish the world by creating an army of superior corroded Digimon. He was Gammamon's original personality and lays dormant within the small triceratops Digimon, but was able to release a small puddle of Gulus Realm Burst particles from his body before he enters the human world and is no longer able to spread the plague. The corrosion he creates through Gammamon eventually went out of control (as he intends to) and devastated the Digital World.


For more info, see the Jet-Black Champion's entry on this page.

Non-Digimon Antagonists

    Daigo 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screenshot_20211123_122939.jpg
Voiced by: Nobuo Tobita

A bird-loving fanatic who teams up with Yatagaramon in order to free the birds of the city.


  • All There in the Manual: Daigo's name doesn't show up anywhere in the episode, only visible in the credits and episode guide.
  • Naïve Animal Lover: He is so devoted to Yatagaramon's cause that he does not even consider the possible dangers of releasing predatory birds from the bird sanctuary.
  • Psycho Supporter: Is one to Yatagaramon, who upon releasing all his birds, decides to follow and lead him to other captive birds to free.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: He is last seen running after Yatagaramon with no resolution to his character.
  • Would Hurt a Child: He was willing to strangle Hiro for trying to stop him and Yatagaramon's attempt to release the birds at the bird sanctuary.

    The Hojo Clan 
Yes, that Hojo clan who formed the Kamakura Shogunate. A Doumon was accidentally possessed by the ghosts of some of its clansmen when practicing magic, and Hiro was later possessed by its lord.
  • Demonic Possession: Most of the army possesses Doumon to try and raise an army to rebuild their kingdom and Hojo himself possesses Hiro.
  • Historical Domain Character: They're based on the real-life Hojo Shogunate of Kamakura.
  • Historical Villain Upgrade: The Hojo clan are now vengeful spirits possessing a Digimon and using its powers to restore the entire Shogunate back to its former glory. Go figure.
  • Outside-Context Problem: They're the second set of antagonists in the series to be a genuinely supernatural force rather than a Digimon appearing to be one or a human teaming up with Digimon. Incidentally, the first one also involved ghosts from the Kamakura Shogunate era.
  • Nightmare Face: The Hojo clan lord possessing Hiro's body sports a rather nasty one once Doumon claims enough victims.

    Kayono Aramaki 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kayono_aramaki.png
Voiced by: Satomi Sato

A classmate and estranged friend of Aoi, the two slowly drifted apart after Aoi met Ruli early on in junior high. After shutting herself away at home for a month, an Ex-Tyrannomon and a WaruMonzaemon appeared out of Kayono's closet and played on her loneliness to turn people into dolls.


  • Abusive Offspring: Once Ex-Tyrannomon and WaruMonzaemon gains her trust, she makes her father Ex-Tyrannomon's first victim. When her mother tries to talk Kayono down despite WaruMonzaemon's warning, Kayono turns her into a doll too before she goes outside of her house for a rampage.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: As soon as Kayono has Ex-Tyrannomon and WaruMonzaemon at her beck and call, she wastes no time in using the former to transform anyone who has annoyed her into a doll, be it her teacher trying to get her to come back to school or a deliveryman making her wait for some takeout. Even those who have unintentionally slighted her aren't safe. Kiyoshiro's cart that he was pulling bumps her arm after she walked too close to it? Doll!
  • Drunk with Power: At first Kayono just ordered Ex-Tyrannomon to turn anyone who enters their house into dolls, while WaruMonzaemon puts her mother in place. Once the three go outside, she starts ordering Ex-Tyrannomon to turn everyone they see into dolls.
  • Elegant Gothic Lolita: As shown in the picture on the right, Kayono takes to wearing a dress in this style once she takes on a more villainous persona.
  • Enfant Terrible: Not initially, but when being accompanied by the evil plush toy Digimon duo, she orders Ex-Tyrannomon to turn anyone she doesn't like into dolls and WaruMonzaemon to threaten anyone who would try to stop her later on. Unlike most examples, she drops it once being talked through by Monzaemon.
  • Evil Costume Switch: When partnering with Ex-Tyrannomon and WaruMonzaemon, she switches from a pink dress into a black and red gothic lolita dress. Once they've been neutralised, Kayono goes back to her original wardrobe.
  • Evil Laugh: Begins to let these out once she has Ex-Tyrannomon go on a doll morphing spree at a park. She also cruelly laughs at Ruli when taunting her with the dolls of Aoi, Kiyoshiro, and Jellymon.
  • Heel–Face Turn: Once she finds out that WaruMonzaemon and Ex-Tyrannomon were just using her to justify wreaking havoc as they please thanks to Monzaemon, she realizes that what she did was horribly wrong. When Monzaemon and Canoweissmon defeat the duo of evil plush toy Digimon, she stitches the arm of her teacher's doll back and apologizes to Aoi.
  • Hikikomori: Kayono had been absent from school and hiding away in her room for over a month, occasionally getting visits from social workers, her teacher and classmates to check up on her or deliver schoolwork.
  • Lack of Empathy: Shutting herself off from people dulled her ability to care about them, which WaruMonzaemon and Ex-Tyrannomon exploit. While Ex-Tyrannomon attacking her father shocked her, she barely reacts when picking up his doll form. This gets even worse when she reaches the point of playing around with her victims, not caring if she damages their bodies and even gives Kiyoshiro's doll a makeover with his hair in such a way that exposes the stuffing in his head. Thankfully, her empathy is later restored by Monzaemon's talk.
  • Living Doll Collector: Collects dolls made from people hit by Ex-Tyrannomon's Dark Matter. She has no qualms ripping them apart like with Kiyoshiro's hair.
  • More than Mind Control: Ex-Tyrannomon and WaruMonzaemon were able to convince her to help them rampage by playing to her loneliness and claiming they only care about her.
  • Noodle Incident: Just how bad was her school life? Whatever it is it must be bad enough that she hates school, but we never know about the exact details.
  • Poor Communication Kills: It's heavily implied at least some of Kayono's friendless status was because of how she chose to shut herself away rather than properly address her feelings of feeling abandoned, something that makes it easy for Ex-Tyrannomon and WaruMonzaemon to enable her worst impulses and lash out at the people trying to help her.
  • Red and Black and Evil All Over: Though the evil part is debatable, she starts wearing a red and black gothic lolita dress once the power offered by her new Digimon friends goes to her head.
  • Talking the Monster to Death: Eventually, it was Monzaemon that finally convinced her that her new "friends" are just using her and restored her lost humanity.
  • Tragic Villain: All she wanted to was to have friends, but Ex-Tyrannomon and WaruMonzaemon played onto her desires so they could wreak mass havoc.
  • Toxic Friend Influence: On her own, she was simply self centered and bitter over her former friend Aoi moving on and making new friends. Once the two Digimon start enabling her worst impulses however she quickly spirals into outright cruelty.
  • Unknown Rival: She views Ruli with disdain, blaming her for supposedly stealing Aoi away from her when they drifted apart, giving her a Death Glare when the team confronts her in the park. For her part, Ruli only shared a class with Kayono in their first year and became friends with Aoi without even knowing about her relationship with Kayono, so she has utterly no clue on why she's the target of her spite.
  • Unwitting Pawn: In truth, Ex-Tyrannomon and WaruMonzaemon were just using her as an excuse to wreak havoc as they always wanted to.
  • Villain Protagonist: A fair amount of her episode is shown from her view, along with Ex-Tyrannomon and WaruMonzaemon, with the main team making short appearances until Kayono leaves her house with her new friends to cause trouble outside. She is notably the first Character of the Day to receive this narrative treatment.

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